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———— | 


nar eeer nae. 


Saturday was a busy day in 
Hillorest, the pay roll being one 
of the largest on record. 


An English miner received in- 
juries in the mine here on Satur- 
day, und was conveyed to the 
Frank hospital, where we learn hy 
is doing well and likely. to recover 


Patrick Moores, who was in 
jured:some time ago by explosion. 
died at the Frank hospital on Fri- 
day morning atid wae buried here 


Mr. 0; B. 8. Whitesides was 4 
a Visitor in town Saturday. 


-Mr. F, Burnett visited Pin 
sher Coll ie week, 


Mr. J. M. Callan returned hom 
ifter spending a month in Van 
souver. " 


Mr.and Nrs, Robson are going 


back Kast to their old’ home in 
on Sunday afternoon, Moores’| Ontario, 
body was/so0. peppered and shat- ¢ 
Mr, W. Chappell i cin 
tered by- gravel -arttd dust that pes sy Cas ti eR tai 


medical’ aid’ was deemed almost 
4 indispensible and he sufferéd, fear- 
/ ful agony during his last few days. 


l.Goodman 


Has opened up a vents furnishing +tore 


near the mjpire Restanrayt, Frank. 
A full line of g-nt’s. furnishinus is on 
the way and. is daily expected, When 


this large shipment arrives+T shall have 
one of the best gents furnishing stores 
in this district and will-be. in a position 
to cater, to the needs of all classes of 
men. 


I solicit x share of your patronage, 


I. GOODMAN 


Frank - Alberta 
A. C. BEACH 
endian Pe 
fssuer of Marriage Licenses 
+~AND~. « 


Registrar of Vital Statisties 


BT 1 


¥RANK Al, TA. | 


The pleasan!) purgative effect experi- 
enced by all who use Ohemberlain’s 
Stomach and faver Tab'ets and the 
healthy condition of the boly wid mind 
which they create. makes‘one feel joy 
ful. Suld by d alers everywhere. 


TMPDRUAL BURL SARRER 


Liberal offers’ to. right \persons.|new machinery including a new : & Cré fad > held 
. Write for particulars, ety, THe) fan aid an electric dynamo is RAY G. An: CPO RPs. mEreNe na and will be in a position to supply ‘the people of 
BLAIRMORE ENTERPRISE. ‘| being installed, so. just watch the] town on Saturday last to take over | Frank. with ot databie and whole 
Clothes Cleaned and Pressed rowth of Maple. Leaf (or east Bel- . ey ran wi pure, pa ; some 
in up todate Style . Mrs. Fisher and family of our Rear met the pastorate of tha ateserrn” BREAD, CAKES, PIES, Ere. 
stimable goal—keeper arrived on shurch here. 
F, ‘1, Fowler Prop: |< y ot erty 3 m Sheffield The football game for the Mutz ‘ 
Baclaod. We hove to have g{Cub which should have. been! Service will be held in the Meth-| 
ngiand, SAPS: 1G ARNG |B ved last Saturday between | 4. 13 sun- 
: played la tist church ere at 7.30 on Sun 
Empire Restaurant pint or two of Stones’s Harry at] frank and Bellevue was posponed \day rene Rev G A 
; he house-warming. on account of the absence of the , , 
Se clay Use Biel ok t referee:, ‘his could have easily |Cropp will preach. alk a 
It isin time of sudden mishap or.acci-| pee remedied ae thete were ; . \ Ga —=—=.2 >| 
all bours, on sbort notice dent that Chamberlain’s Liniment can Sioty oh cian’ @W6 ould awe of | Died—on Friday the 14th. inst. ii : 


and at moderate prices. 


Frank Athe 


TO RENT 


Five SRE Ry over the Drug 
Store at Blairmore. Rooms 
Suitable for Offices or. Private 
Residence. Apply at 


i 


rand gone to 


Alberta | 


very hard on a cottage behinfl thi 
Southern hotel . I .wonder why 7 


Mr. Devyolit has left Bellevu: 
Merrit, 3. C, 


he intends to reside in the 


where 
futare 

Bellevue is such a pretty place 
that all the motorists of the con- 


tinent have..been yisiting us this) 
week. (I dont think). 


Cupid is casting her datts rather 
thick a, pea am just pow, Get 
the tin ca’ arid sticks ready boys { 


and 


famous band will appear at, the 


Madame Squaw-Lina her 


bazaar particulars of which will 


he given at a later date. 


The 


new wash-house is eom- 
pleted and being used... Without 


Joubt it isone of the best wash- 


houses in the Pass, 


A ribbon dance was held in the 
Socialist hall last. Friday (pay 


day). The. attendance was small 
but a very enjoyable time 
spent 


Mr. Ralph Lowery, formerly pit- 
boss at Lille has taken up 
position as fire-boss in No. 1 mine} 
hong ‘ 

Peeper MM. 
| Sshishaath operation on ‘Thursday 
last, Weare pleases to hear the 


a 


dt atlas is progressing succeesfully night... Other — subjects will he| SOMERTON BROS. 
brought forward as the pups wish.! ‘yo. Gratton was in town on Tues: 
bere edt cob Seger, Mr. Finlay has just returned day and made some fine purchases | 
Rabe sie eee eR RINT feet seOOe from a fiy: ng vigit to Spokane, | at the auction sale at Miller's Livery 
in Passburg, where Mr, Rundle where a.meting o ‘the directors-of Stubte. bo Ww. WE SH 
has secured.a position with the|the Maple Leaf Coal Co, was held ate i 
| Leiteh Collieries. in regare to. the further develop- A sad accident occured bere on 


WANTED—Reliable — correspon- 
dents at Frank, Burmis, Hillcrest, 
Passburg, Lundbreck and Cowley. 


be relied upoi to take the place of the 
family doctor, who cannot always be 
!fourd at the moment, Then it is that 
Chamberlain's Liniment is never found 
wacting. In cases of. sprains, cuts, 
wonnds and bruises Chamherlain’s Lini- 
iment takes out the sorenesé and drives 
away the pain, Sold by Gealers-every- 
where. 


Alon? with Mrs. Fisher cag 
Miss Copeland who hopes to be a 


life-long partner of Mr. A. Padgett. 
| By the time these lines appear the 


WATSON’S DRUG STORE | happy event will have taken place, 


Blairmore, or to 


S. J. WATSON, 


Head Office 


! 


Frank, Alta. pop peette 


‘THE LEITCH COLLIER! iS, LTD. 
Passburg. Alberta 


Steam and Domestic Coal 


High Grade--Uniform Quality 


Northera Bank Building, Winripeg, Man. 
Sales Office and Mines. - 


and we all. join heartily in wish- 
ing Mr. and Mrs. Padgett heartiest 
cofgratulations for a long life and 


\ 


Careful Attention to all Trade, 


! Dempsie, whois sick,, Mr. J. Fin- 
was\jJay jis acting general’ manager of 


Matt®on “waderwent a| 


Lille ‘Notes ioe in and 
Around Frank 


A. V. Lang Heol a colin id pay- 
day. 


The Catholic church is almost! 
com pleted . . es | 


The Passburg Hotel” 


-T. H. Duncan, 


app — enti feta tds 


H. Sigotte-is removing sabes here 


a, 
to Passhnig. 


J. H. Lee wis in Lille. this week, 
loing work in the accounting dept. 
f£P. Barns & Co. 


The preacher pere on Sunday night 
vas the Rev. Mr. Robinson, who! 
lelivered en excellent sermon, ‘bnt 
she attendance was not as good. as, it 
sight to have been. 


Ries. 
Bright, Clean Wholesome Rooms 


Miss M. Gate of Coleman was in| 


iown this week. ; : 


The Bar is..well stoc honk with the Vinest ¥ Wines, 


The Contractors are still grading 
the streets. 


Mrs. Rudd of the Southern Hotel! Pusan Uaiudu NAS 


Bellevue was in town on Monday. 


Liquors and Imported and Domestic Cigars 


Coroner Pinkne¥ held! an- inquest 
it Frank or Saturday touching, the | 
leath of Richard Moore, who died 
the Fran\ hospital through injunies 
received at Hillerest.’ Parsichlars of 
whien are given ulsewhere. 


SS 5] 
iT Carney &Sons 
LIVERY BARN 


GOOD HORSES NEW RIGS 


BEST SERVICE IN THE PASS 


.J Bartlett passed through. on 
/ at way to Passburg last Saturday. 


J. Miiler’s Livery 


_— 
| 
outfit was sold | 


! TT 
| by auetion on Tuesday afternoon. | 
Yeur congh anneys you. Keep on 
} 
} 
| 


hacking ond tearing the delicat: memes Mrs.-A. V. Lang will shortly leave | 


branes ef your throat ifyen want ty be| Frank for an extended trip to Hast 
annoved, Batif yon want relief, want ern points. 


to be Cnred, take Chamberitin's Conph . ¥ i 

him waw. SOMERTON BROS. 
Niarm Clocks at $2 00. 
5O0e. on each clock. 

last week, a Reading: Room and | 


Library are to‘be opened, which We A. 
trust will meet. with the suceess it] Parbondale, 


Tatoo} 
Saves you 


se}] 


Sold hy dealers everywhere. 


In conneetion with the social held 


McLean of Oatville Ranch, 


Alberta, was in town 


deserves. Mrs.-Williams and Mrs; last week. : 3 1 JeuTe® o ear 4 a 
Wright . suppiied refreshment#| The new Sanitarium is now free! B ro LL E Vv U E = AL T A 
during the evening and ree from the noise of the carpenters? 

readings, ete., were yyivery and an! hammer. ‘fy = 


enjoyable evening was spent, 


For Thanksgiving Day, October 
31,1910, the Catiadian Pacific Rail- 
way Conipany are antborizing a. rate 
of fare and one-third for the round 


J.B. Harmer was in -Bellévue | te 
Monday on business for J. W) 
Gresham. 


Wm. Janes, special representative. 


~ Mpa ys 
9 p sheet fe re a * Holt for the BLAIRMORE ENTERPRISE was | no Soe iah | iene s 
28 to 31 inelasive; final ‘return. limit}. : ' ag LPB ‘ge, he ob i €) 
November 2. 1910 ie Sheer 'on Serna (aes J . W, Gresham 
nt SOMERTON BROS. for Fine! tee 
Watch and Jewelry Repairing, Di+-| 


of Mr. 


During the absence 


mond Setting and Engraving. 


GENERAL BLACKSITE. AND ‘WRELWRGST 


_ Hagdwood of all kinds always: in stock. 
PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL wbteogy 


Coroner Pinkney was down fronr 
Lille on Tuesday 66 cnquite into the 


death off, Kouropatkien. 


J. W. 
weting 
ereteeks, 


the Mapte Leaf Coal Co, 


At held 
jehuret hon Thursday last 


the 


% 
in 
for.. 


the 
the. 
night 


the meeting Gresham, J.P. was acthints:| 


justice at the R.N.W.M.P. 
oa at on Mognda 
seiieaheh ial 

FOR SALE- Die tra Fine. First 
Rivers Steel Blue Diamond 1} ct. in} 
heavy Belcher. Mounting for $2.50. 


purpose of starting 

jeebool; a ‘small but ve 
1 wut Wadtence decided to start the 
classes. with: Mathematies on ‘Mon- 
day night and ‘Bngilsh on Tuesday | 


ment of the mine. The meeting} Tuesdiy when F. Koaropatkien, one | 
decided to open up a new slope, {of our Slavonian citizens, was crushed | 
also to carry forward the tunnel in ‘40 death by the falling of rock at) 
the Bellevue: seam, and a lot’ of! the shaft. 


Will me up in Frank on Saturday, Ogtober Ist, 
a First Class Bakery, which will be'k: own as the 


-HOME BAKERY-- 


Thomas, son of J. MeDonajd of Me-}| 
Donald & MeDonnell, » propgietors of if 
the Union Hotel, He *was baried ati = 
the Biairmore Cemetery on Saturday, ‘a 
Chas. Gardner, late of Frank, who| 
has been prospeeting’ in the Elk 
district, was killed there réeently by| 
expense, and also the business )a fall of rock. My Gardner, who was | 
people of Frank must have missed|an old timer of Frank, leaves 4 
quite a bunch of money through | widow and children for whom mueh | 
the spectators returning ‘home, but sympathy is felt. * 
of these things the Frank people 
did not care, Well, we hope to! Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has 
t Wednesd | become famous for its cures: of coughs, 
have our revenge nex edne day | Try it when 
whenrthe game will be playec jin need. it contains no harmful 


‘Mr. J, Canfield of Coal Creek will | vtante and always gives prompt wohl, 
be referee. | Sold by dealers everywhere, 


ficiated, but the Frank . people 
would not agree to having any one 
officiate except the referee appointed 
by the league, Bellayue agreed to| 
have a Frank, Coleman or Belle- 
vue man act as referee; but, alas ! 
it looked jike: a case of eold feet: 
Our boys were pnt to considerable | 


‘New Tailor Shop 


‘=McCutcheon Brothers,- 


Who conducted a Tailor Shop in Spokane for several years, 
wish to inform the people. of the Pass that they have just 
opened up a Tailor Shop in Bellevue, where they are prepared 
to doall kinds of Tailoring, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing. 
Prices Moderate —and— Satisfaction Guaranteed 


McCUTCHEON BROTHERS 


BELLEVUE, ALBERTA 
aS —— So eee OOO 


| colds, croup and influenza. 


Benevue M eat M arket 


P. HART, 


A 


- 
> 


Passburg, Alta. 


Correspondence Solicited. 


- es 


- eovered behind the kitchen 
_jthe laugh was on 
Fd Sel 


~. 

arti¥ies and tlustrations must not 
be reprinted without special permis. 
si0n.) 


SPROUTED . OATS DANDY FOR | 


POULTRY. 

A friend whose nusband was forever 
teasing Ler because she got vo eggs in 
Winter quietly came to us for a.tip. 

She wanted winter eggs, but she 
wikhed to buve one on Jobo more, 


Sbe bud been feeding cut bone and | 


mixed grains, but no greens, and the 
solid ration made her hens too fat to 
lag. ° 

We furnished her enough sprouted 
@ate till what she. soaked shouid 
sprout und advised ber to give her 
hens less grain und to make them 
ecratch bard for that for antifat and 
(blood cireniator, ‘ 
_ Pretty soon the eggs-began to come, 
and iustead of accepting it all as bona 
fide John accused ber of feeding egg 


” dopes. 


° 


She showed him a tong box of sprout. 
ved green oats which bad been kept 


SPROUTED OATS. | 


Jobn, 


= 
POs 13 vats wax sprouted in cheese 
box lids fourteen tucbes in’ diameter, 
jkept warm beside our bot water beater 
in the cellar in January, 

- Pwo quarts of heavy vats when.soak- 
ed are enough for a lid" and make a 
good meal of greev feed for forty to 
tifty hens. ; 

A re pare aie by 3 feet will 
givea plentifti/l day’s feed for G00 heus, 

All that is necessary are a box with 
‘a-rim, good heavy outs, plenty of 
water and a teuperature of 60 degrees 
or more. — 

Soak the oats fur tweoty-four hours, 
‘then spread thew no deeper than two 
‘inches in the receptacle and water well 
vevery day: ey 

Bore a few. holes in the box for 
draipnge. set it level and do not stir 
the oats or allow them to get dry. 

For a continuous supply you must 
put oats to soak right along to tak 
ithe place of what you feed. ' 
: Lhe oats soon begin to grow, the 
‘sprouts coming to four to six inches 


HELPING THEMSELVES. 


jo from ten to fifteen days. All poul- 
try like sprouted oats, Pheasants and 
Beigian hares run for it. Feed it when 
tender as lettuce, feed it regularly and 
watch the eggs pile up. | 


a 


DON'TS, 
Don't keep puuitry right close to the 


well. Youu cao't use the water; it will, 


smell. 

Don't forget that fruit and poultry 
pay. There'll be fruit to setl aod sore 
away. 


Don't leave doors open. Your cocks | 
may get together and be spuiled for | 
sho 


wv. 

Uon't imagine crows are just pest ex- 
terminators, They are great chick 
perambulators. ; 

Don't jet the babes alone in the 
house where they can get at the in- 
eubator, Ob, Bo; you're pot such a 
careless mater. 


! 
1 
| in awhile, 
{ 


LIFE’S TOO SHORT FOR STRIFE. 
Wonderfnt what fitde things cause 
big heart stings! f,! 


| filles out of the back door, and Biddy's 
scratching stunts are o’er, 
Then what a jaw wrangle and law 
' tangie! i ‘ 
A cat pounces on a chick, 
Then watch that broomstick and 
| words fly thick! What a fussin’ and 
mussin’ and cussin! 
| like a spider’s web, one blast of wind 
| and it’s all fied.” : 
| But life’s too short for strife. 
\ 
| 


home and scratch in their own patch 
and their owuers must see thut they 
| do so, and be who will not obey the 
law, but allows his heus to destroy his 
neighbor's Hower beds and garden and 
lets bis dogs run on their lawns ang 
porches, should be notitied by the. cops 
to quit or git. : 
But that cat— 

|. The Audubon society wants the 
; 8,000.00) cuts in the United States to 
| be killed because they catch birds. ° 

But they shonid count the birds on 


them and not pussy cats, 


they ki chicks.” 

Yes; poor starved cats, get 'em once 
Well ted cats don’t. 
There's poor old ‘Tabby and her kit- 


| tens. Her owner doesn’t feed ber. She 


catches a few rats and wice and then 
ber babies go to starving. 

She takes a chick, and some big 
hulk of a stingy may shoots ber or 


| sets poison and she dies a lingering 


! 


| 


‘| inhumanity to man.” 


death among ber starving kittens. 
The preachers, discourse on “wan’s 
How about 


| man’s brutality to brutes or cruelty to 


| 


_ blue is to let the devil ma 
| you. 


| 
hon and 
3 pete ay «ter | 


cats? 


FEATHERS AND ‘EGGSHELLS. 

My friend, if you did get licked at 
the show there: ure vag | and wil 
men should ve brothers. ‘Fo hold a 
grudge at a wan who rap ribbon 


“And friendship, | 


‘The law says bens must stay at) 


their bats, for it’s woman that Kills | 


Some poultrymen say, “Kill the cats; » 


| 
| 


| 
| 


| 


buiMing a well in the cellar, is stilt in 
operation, ty 
" 
. Helping the Bees. 
A euston: willely. preeatent in Ger 
many and Austria’ is the Placing of 
beehives on wagons and moving then 


to felds or orchards that are in bloow, 


- Red Tuberoses. 

Chinese florists bave tuberoses of a 
Ted color avhich, thowever, is not in 
herent inothe plot, but ls produced in 
two Ways--elther by placiug the thower 


dissolved or by supplying the roots of | 


the plant with water in Whieh the col- 


| oring matter has been dissolved. 


The Adirondacks. 

There pre no venomous snakes or 
beasts in all of the great Adiroudack 
forest section, although there are deer 
in abundance, eugies, pheusants, bears 
and beavers, : 


Lung Cells. 

One bundred aud seventy-five million 
cells. are in the Jungs, whieh. would 
cover a surface thirty Umes greater, 
thin the buman body. 


Garters In Chira. 

In China the natives tie the bottoms 
of their troixers closely around their 
ankles and so do not beed gurters. 
They bave a fondness for. American 
garters; boivever, but Wear’ theal, vp 
the outside us orndments. 


Orchards. 

Experianents buve stuwn that, while 
orchards ure injured by cutte, they 
yleld better results with sheep. or bogs 
than when pot pastured at all 


Driving Rivets. 
Ordinarily ov voier work, where the 
rivet must be steam tight and well 
driven, 1.000 or 1500 rivets might be 
considered a good day's work, while 
ou structural work, such as girders, 
3.000, 4.000 or more ure generally 
driven, and on such irregular work as 
trusses probably 2.000 or 2.500, 
Whales In Deep Water. 
It is estimated that a whale when 


a fool of | he plunges, ax be often does, 4,000 feet 


down inté the sea bas to support a 


Now that chickens buve more range | pressur wot over 200.00 tons, or 137 


FOP Rimes they conte es 
| evening feed you throw down to 
them. " ey 
Five bundred dollars was paid for 
the turkey gobbier that won tirst at 
New ‘ork, Bultimore and Hagers- 
town, Md. It is the largest turkey in 


Burns, Orievt, 8. D, 

* During the wiuter when egg prices 
at York, Pa.. remained way up ata 
certain market it wus discovered that 
the price of eggs. Each market day 
he simply notified the farmers they 
should bold their eggs at u certain tig- 
ure and, if not solid out at that price, 
he would take all the eggs unsold at 
a certain price. Obh,-what bogs in the 
hen’s nest! 


| Pity Ponce de Leon didn’t hunt the 
| spring of perpetual youth in these 


days, By going down into his jeans 
he could have got the tip from the 
cold storage experts who have dis- 
| ¢overed the’ secret of eterna! youth 
for eggs. 

| A Philadelphia paper declares that 
| any live boy who is smart enough to 
lace his own shoes can succeed in the 


you read this that Philadelphia editors 
drink Schuylkill water. 


make dandy turkeys. A Woman ex- 


' gecessity. 
} 
| hime, 


pert has a bed of them especially for 
her turkey poults and chops them with 
breadcrumbs und hard boiled eggs 
one day and uses onion tops for green 
the next. The dandelion keeps their 
bieod pure and the onions kill intes- 
tinal worms. 

When old bens rose to 18 cents at 
Chicago it was claimed they eclipsed 
the civil war price. 


when foraging parties were after 
them. 

The American farmer's wife bas the 
reputation of serving the best square 


plenty and to spare, but she should 
beware to pile up her tittle turkeys’ 
Pilates as she does those of her guests. 
Thousands of turkeys die of overfeed- 
ing. 

Young Leghorns get wing feathers 
80 quickly that their wiugs grow ut the 
expense of their bodies and become a 
drag. ‘They should be cut back ttke 
planta. ? 

A g00d compressed air sprayer is aj 
“Spray the bennery with’ 
spray the roosts with coal oll, 
‘spray the trees for pests and spray! 
roosting fowis with carbolic fumes| 
when roup und cholera germs are’ 
around. 


Keeping an ineybator lamp itn per.’ 


Don't let the ebirkens track the beck | ft Comditiou” takes but a tittle time! 


ba mao any wife shuld 


. Don’t put that brooder too near the 
thief may baul it off all 


each day. but the lives of your family 
and safety of your property depend on 
‘whether you ure careless or careful in 


the matter. 


suite. s0 sawtues | Lo. WoTPawemady, | 


| poultry business, Don't forget when | 


Kut the old sol- | 
| diers tell us ail poultry flew higher | 


and pick up a good bitin 2. day you | cous to the square foot. 


ude ano 


; on \ 7 nd 5 eS ¢ 
Wares em Ay. BK Bg 


py a 


"of teh,” xaye of 


fingers on ‘bis right hand and only 
fractions of the others. His first fin: 


|.aer is cut off short, and the tiddic 


fluger is wrecked so that the first joint 
turns almest at right anges toward 
his thumb. 
band is the 
curves, Brown pitches the book over 
band, felensing the ball at graduated 
Points after the band passes the tine 


| of the center of the body in swinging. 
Upon the point at 
stalk in water in which a cred earth is | 


Whieh the ball it 
Telensed bs —-the fingers the place of 
the ‘brenk’ depends, and Brown can 
by regulating the point uf  rélense 
make tt either deserite a wide, fast 
are or, after traveling Gfty feet. brenk 
suddenly nt a shirp ‘angle from its 
epizinal course If the batter 
to the back of the batter's box Brows 
by releusing the ball a flash sooner. 
can onke it break to front of the tat 


| 


ter, almost over the plate, Tf the bat 
ter moves to the front of the box te 
meet the cnrve before it breaks a sud 
den jerk of the piteber’s wrist makes 
the ball brenk several feet in front of 
the plate. He controls the point of 
the break or curve at will, ekcept when 
the ball slips, as it sometimes will do 
even with ‘the greatest’ of pitchers, 
Most players who faced hit in duels 
between batter and pitehe™ concede 


Brown's curve to-be the greatest of | 


all, but no member of the Detroit team 
who. batted against Overall in the 
world’s championship series of 1s 
will acknowledge that Brown ts bet: 
ter. In the game that Overall pitched, 
the final one of the series, bis curve 
broke tn such an astonishing manner 
as to surprixe even himself. Overall 
pitehes his curve with a wide, sweep- 
ing, overhand swing, releasing the ball 
over the side of bis index finger just 
as bis band turns downward.” 


Cradles Unfashionable. 
Cradlex are going out; children are 
not weuring them any more lVeuple 
tell us that rocking is unhygienic. Ha 
bies, according to modern idea, shoud 


go to sleep nuturaliy in a stationary 


germ proof bed with antiseptic pillows 


| and a sanitized rattie, Sentiment may 


suve the cradle for a little while, but 
sooner or tater it will go to the dusty 
attic along with the hairclothb sofa. 
Maybe the infant of tomorrow will 
bear up somehow under these accumu 
lated misfortunes, will struggie along 


| ag ‘ to maturity, but what about 
It has been found in Svatzeriand that 


| 
| 
\ 
| 
| 


| the United States, weighs ‘tifty-two |” 
| pounds und now belongs to HW. H. 


Chopped dandelions are claimed to 


n 
| 
‘ 
i 


| 


Lpin Liberia 
| height 


| 


| 
| 


{ 
} 
} 


in buiiding a Sraliway lbverers can 
work onty one third as tong at a beight 
of 10,000 feet as u unle lower, 

— ° 

A Golden Bath, 
Mme, du Barty when at the.zenith 
ot bet power bad a: bath so construct- 
ed Chat on touching a tip a cascade of 
gvideu ivuis frou a reservoir that was 
wways kept well filled iningled with 
the fuw of scented water, ‘This device 
Was fashioned, it is said, tu represent 
ibe Jegend of Dauue. 


Dynamite. 


Dynamite becomes wore dangerous | 


fo bandle ip coid weather, bDecuuse its 
uitrogiveerin coutent freezes at frow 
42 tu 46 F, 


“The Man in-the Moon. 

An old folklore legend confidently 
asserts that the tau ‘in the woop is 
ho other than that ancient Hebrew 
whom. the Jews Stoned to death for 
gutheripg sticks on the Subbatb day, 
us recorded in Nutubers xv, 32-386, 


Netherland Fruit Farms. 
Some truit lauds in the Netherlands 


are valued as bigh as $5.20U per acre, | 


Detroit's First Map. 


this elaiwed than Josep Caspard 


Chavdsgros de Derby, a Freucb en- 
giueer, made the Grst taps of Detroit 
in 1749 aud 1754, 
Liberian Sugar Cane. 
agar cuue reaches a 
of tweoly to thirty feet, 
stalk sometimes becomes so, heavy 
that it ls bent over until it tonebes the 
eround ip two or three places, king 
rout at each -place, 
—_ 
Tired Feet. 
When your feet are very tired and 


| hot, plunge them into a basin of cold 
meal op earth. May she always have | 


water and keep them there until a sen 
sation of warmth begins, Then dry 
them aud put on fresh stockiugs apd 
shoes. 
S$ 
Arab Music. 

Arab wusic bas been described as 
the singing of a prima danna who bas 
ruptured ber voice in irs my fo xing & 
duet with herself. Kach note starts 
from somewhere between a sharp and 
a flat, but does vol stop even there and 
splits up juto four or more portions, of 
whieh no person cun be expected. to 
cateb uwre thao ane at a time. 


England's Navy. 


was Henry Vil. It was in 1488 chat 
Hegry built the Royal Harry, consid. 


ered to be the beginying of the Kaog- | 


| 


lish navy. His own subjects were de- 
Plerably ignorant of fhe art of ship 
buliding, aud be Tmperted Genoese 
workmen to instruct them. Thé Keyal 
Harry was the first real Kuiish war- 
ship ever bulli, and it .reumined the 
mode! ship fur wore thao fifty years 


What a world of sentiment and melody 
has been woven around the theme of 
the hotber and the gently rocking cra 
die! What kind of song will the poor 
poet of the future be able to make 
about an enameled tron crib with brase 


} trimmings 7—Success Magazine. 


Telephoning With Light. 
Phototeiepiony has reached a eom- 


meicial basis in Genmany, Ernst Kou. | 


| mer of Gerlin bas contrived an appara: 


A | 


} 
{ 


{im dia day uu’. time de 


| aud Sher ure high 


| fore Columbus wae born, 


| will 
The “father of the British navy” | 


tus by which intelligible speech can be 
transmitted over a distance ‘of nine 
miles with the uid of a beam of light. 
The principle of the machine is bused 
upon the sensitiveness of an are light 
to sound, combined with the property 
of selenium, of varying its electrical 
resistanve witb the slightest variations 
in the intensity of a ray of ligtt fall- 


ing upon it! A searchlight projector | 


al the transmitting end and a selenium 
cell ina telephonic circuit at the re 
ceiving end are the @s8éorial features 
of the apptratus. For use in: misty 
weatber, when speech would be inan- 
dible, the inventor has contrived a 
method of transmitting Morse sound 
signals by periodic pulsatiuns of the 
ligbl—St. Louis Kepublic, 


—— 


Good Time to Turn Farmer. 


ln theory there vever was uo better | 


tine than right now for a sensible 
man to wove from city to country. I'be 


movement his been away from the | 
| fara until prices of all kinds of food | 
There is nothing in | 


sight to indicate that prices will be 
greatly reduced by increased produc- 
thon, A crep well grown and haudied 


with good business judgment will be | 
reasonably sure of sale ata fair price. 


There bever was a time when it was 
80 enSyY fo learn Dew methods and the 
principles of acientitie furnang. A mau 
starting now may receive at once the 


| benetit of thirty years of the experi- 


ence and study: of good farmers and 
aclepritic experts.—Fl W, Collingwood 
ip Metropolitan Maguzine, 


—- — 


leeland, 

Iceland is perhaps the only country 
fu the world with a strougiy devet- 
Oped Wersry bistory which remains tu 
‘the sume unchanged siate of nammre 
today anit. did. 1(000 veurs ago, when 
the characters of the grear sagas 
raimed the rocky slope; of the pie 
turesque isiiand or when Leif Kriesou 
and his hardy oursmen sailed the sens, 
even fo Atmerken, several centuries be 
Professor 
W oH Beboteid of Harvard university 
head au expedition to leeland 
this year and hopes to find much of 


| interest ‘cofnected witb the aucient 


myths aud legends, 
The “isky Place. 

“I used ter 1biuk it wuz a good idee 
ter keep in de widdle er de road,” anid 
| Brother Dickey, “but ef you walks dar 
ortermobile wtlt 
she’ Knock you sky bigb!'—Atlante 
Constitution. 


z . * 


i 
Fin 


Brown bas but two entire> 


Perhaps this mutilated | 
secret of tis marvelous | 


retires | 


Ancient Banks. — . 


hy, 
> 


“thes 


a8 the linding place of all im 
| entering the port ot New York, 


~———e ‘ 
i] 
e 


; ; Cod Liver Oil. 
It takes # bundred fivers to sield one 
mullon of cod liver oll, ~ 


A Tea Test. * 


To test ‘tea, buro a smoatt quantity 
on a metal plate With good tea the 
amount of wsh-renminiig is small, in 
creasing In quantity asthe quality of 
| the sample tested deteriontes, 

dia. 

India fa not a tation. but simply 4 
collection of heterogeneous people, 
| The mass of the population in spite cf 
their sun tanned skins ate Afyans. but 
the yellow race ts represented on the 
northeast borders, while the Carottinn 


| of the colored ruce, 


| 

| 

| 

} ‘ — 

’ Rice Wine. 

Excepting grape wine, the oldest al- 


a tice wine 
Japuuese for over 2,000 years. 


—_—-- 


A Bee Line. 


proverbial. 
tween any two given points is called a 
bee line Many observers tink that 
the lintnense eyes with which the tn- 
sect is furnished greatly assist if they 
| do not entirely account for the arrowy 
| straightness of its passage through the 


| air, 


First Balloon Ascension. 
The first 


| Rosters Nov. 21, 178% | This balloon 
was inflated with heated air, 


The Banana. 


thait’no tnsect will attack ft, and an 
other that ft is absolutely immune 
from the diseases that fruits are «nb 
ject to - It is one of the curiosities of 
the vegetable kingdom. 


Fool's Gold. E ¢ 
Fool's gold is the popular name ap 
| plied to a group of minerals known to 


for use as a.mimgtaging, It ix noweused: 
’ migrants 


del const section consists fu large part 


) coholic beverage known to man is sak | 
It has been used by the | 


The directness of the bee's filrht ts | 
The shortest distance be | 


balloon ascension ever | 
made was undertiken -by Pilitre des | 


A peculiar fact about the banana is | : d 
going Foo pleces 


| 


a 


| Mineralogists as»pyrites and which are | 


| often mistaken for gold ore. 


Napoleon's Marengo. 

The white charger Marengo, which 
carried Napoleon on the field of Water 
loo. reached an honored old age After 

irte’s Aight, Maren 


’ f f d 
Sa te te 


He was) PUMing a cake of pure white soup-in we 


solately on the hattlefield. 


iy 
| 


| 


| 


| 


xent to England, where he spent many | 
, Poor a prot of boiling water over the 


happy yeurs “in peaceful pastures 
Marengo survived’ Napoleon  oive | 
years. , 


Sn 


‘The Twelve Inch Gun. 
‘The naval twelve inch gun bas an 


|. effective range up to fifteen miles, ana | 


will actually throw a projectile the 
astounding distunce of twenty-three 


| miles, 

| The Deadly Fly. 

) A fly bacteriologically examined has 
been found to carry 100,000 bacteria. 


Raisins. 
Containing but 13 per cent of mois 
ture and the balance almost wholly 


is on a par with the date and the dried 


giz us ap energy producer ip the sys 
tem, 


A a. 
~ In natural wonders Arizona is one of 
the most attractive parts of the United 
States gms Grauud Canyon of the Cor 
orado river, a mile deep, its xilicitied 


| 
| 
)*trees or fossil forests, its vast pano 


nn cer ty 


> SH nkes cote and thought.” sald @ 


Uber fiber wate mip weight, and itt 
threaten to grow a trifle stout there is 
Hheisitess, and | am advieed anxious. 
ty net to tke chocolate, or too mucir 
dessert, aod there te great relief in the 
(amily wheo | return to my. original 
(Uithess, Lt sounds absurd, but wher 
4 mere litte woman keeps the huuse 
hippy with «a few gowns and tice 
ways | _call it cheap at the pains. 
Don't tell any One for the world, but 
the boy"—that is the way she alludes 
to her son and beir—“has a baif mile 
course tid oft down at our piace im 
the country, and nothing pleases bint 
better than to get me out there buck. 
ut the evergreens for a run with binr 
on a bright morning. You can ‘rur 
vour text off. quicker than you can get 
rit of tt any otber way, and, it jeaves 


') you feeling as if you could set the bay 


on fire.’ 

“That's the way @ woman ought to 
feel,” snid ap older wounmn, whoxe deeyr 
blue goWH set off a face Of rose red 
and white and brilliant keen gray eyes 
made the glance wander after ter. 
“When towas out in the country pev- 
pie uxed to wouder at me, and they 
snid, “She goes about like a young girl.’ 
t uxked! ‘How should t go about? b 
felt. hight and pertectly easy in mo- 
tion, while their women went about 
staid, moping, artiticial, becuuse they 
thought they niast do se. | got in and 
out of a carringe without help, while 
one ot their women had to have’ three 
then cole to offer a band, and ther 
sbe tell out With a puff as if she were 
When » woman bus 
urge Migs, HN Wwe Nave, she ix tighter 


| nnd gets HrOUNd esmer, Just asx birds 


do with the air ceils in their bones, of 
they wre wadded with flesh about the 
Nips wand chest with poking about thetr 
housekeeping and breathing fumes of 
So tnuet cookery amd sitting around 
wid Moving siawly when they gu about 
aftecwurd © 
One Way to Shampoo. 

Bee | Speciiuist Who Das had snccess 
wit treating failing oair has never 
WOH On OST poem That are ensily 
wiopted by the girl who washer herr 
owt hair 
7 Nhemtee ne f soapeude ba 


piteher that neids' a couple of quarts 


romp and shake until’ thick lather tt 


| forteed, When the soap is removed, 


Let the wixture cool to blood heat 


Vat se that it will wet senid the skin ane 


pour a uitie ata time over. the senip, 
rubbing Won Wirth the tips of the tine 
pers 

When senip is well cleansed pour the 
rest of het wixture over the long mrt. 
Wishing Wt gentty down from the roots 


| foward the ends, 


grape sugar ‘carbohydrates the raisin | 


Rinse with weiem. water, using # 
bath spray: and keep it up until ne 
soipetds renain. either on scHuip or 
wu tee. Part pair and spray meni p 
psperbilly at sides Of Dead and at mipe 
of tek 

Have several. smooth towels made 
very fot and dry the baie with them 
When neiriy tinisted separate bur 
WO strinds, thread with tlagers oF 
comb to remove tiugies, then draw fine 
gers from seaip to ends of batt apt. 


| ois dry, sett nod Mofty, 


) wold 


ramas of desert and sterile mouutains | 


12,000 feet ubove sea level, afford spien 
did visious for the sightsder, 


Eli Terry's Cloc 
‘The first attempt” to” Manufacture 
watches or clovks op a large scale in 
America was made by Ell Terry, a 
Connecticut Yankee, who invented 
wooden wheels for his clocks, 


: Coerced Domicile. 

| Italy retains a special form of ban- 
ishmeut tutroduced under the Roman 
eraperors kuown as everced domicii¢ 
This punishmeut corresponds to the 
Reman deportation to an island and 
‘ike It consists in criminals being con 
ned to an island for a definite time 
and enjoying within its limits personal 
freedom. 


ee 


Overfatigue. 
| Overfatigue lessens vitality and in 
/ CuDsequence leaves ‘the system mure 
Hable to fall a prey to any disease 
| Kerms with which it comes in cyp- 
| "set 


Boils. 

Rolls come from the staphylococens 

byogenes aureus and are very common 

' ju people with Bright's disease, tia- 

} betes, gout, tuberculosis and disorders 

of digestion and often appear after se 

| vere fevers. Boils are commonest in 

the spring, and sometimes epidemics 

| of bolls run through hospitals, jails, 
| barracks aud asylums, 


i 


| Banks existed in China, Babylon, 
| Greece aud Rowe before the Christian 
‘era. The eartiest records of European 
bared are those of Venice founded 4. 

. 171 


that rise to a height of wore than | 


This specintist does pot betteve {re 
witer Musing, whicdb most pair- 
dressers feel will prevent cold. ‘fhe 
Hor Watet gives more pf a gloss ame 
prevents tirstiness, She aiso avoid 
combing The tat woeu wet or pulling 


| when drying. 


. eee 


Use Much Cold Crean. 

Afier exposure tu the suv do oof 
Mithe (he face at once. Kup 1D 
OULNINR Cold Crema, letting Ht pemaue 
aC beast hail an hour, Wash off wattr 
Water as bot as cig be endured, Be 
fore going to Deu that Ouwbht red uP 
Mere cvld cream, wetting i slay in wo 
i morniog, woeu it may De washew 
of with sonpeuda and dushea witt? 
cold water or iuuips of ice to close (Der 
bores f 

Where it is impoasible te use xrense’ 
on first returning home wipe off su 
and grime with nieohot ane rose water, 
ole [mirt of former to three of iatter.. 
then apply cietos wrung from very 
fot water to atiay the burg. 

Where sinturn tas a ‘poisonous ef: 
fect, producing blisters or ugly seren, 
extrn cure must be taken tor preter: 
feu Before going on any long expe 
dition ow .iind or water rub giyeerur 
Tate the” Tace, then powder thickiy 


WIED Qiighenia, oF use a skin foud ane 
(alcum powder, 


Eyes Indicetion of Health. 

Binee ei teat ane Sprite are 
Maollestied OY the clearness and alert: 
bess of the eves, so every derange- 
ment of the Dediiv functions tenves ie 
luprens  upen (ei. Uneoimusiy, 
When veKed of fired even, ve Irowan, 


Wd) ROO The habe ie Produced, ane 


ugiy furrows appeur, 
beauty of ine Ory ‘TO remove thee 
ines sireteh the akin BOONE tee 
tWeen the thumb and toretinger of the 
left hand aud vigerousiy rub a bat oF 
skin food i on direction opposite tw 
fBal iv Wied toe) are torimed, 


marring = tie 


pretty matron fteniy,. “Lhe boys and - 


him. 

“Phelim hung his head. 

* ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘sure an’ I tell 
there ain’t much ye don’t see 
fae pretty brown eyes o’ yourn,’ 


| friend of yours.”’ 


The Retort Courteous 


A one-armed man sat down to his) 
noonday luncheon in. a little restaur-| 
ant the otner day and seated on the 
right of him was a big, sympathetic 
individual from the rural district. The 
big fellow noticed his neighbor's left 
sleeve, and kept eyeing him in a sort 
of how-did-it-happen way. The one- 
armed man failed to break the ice, 
but continued to keep busy with his 
one hand supplying the inner man. 
At last the inquisitive one changed his 
position a little, cleared his throat, 
and said:.‘I see, sir, you have lost an| 
arm.”’ Whereupon the unfortunate 
man picked up. the empty sleeve with | 
his right hand, peered into it, looked | 


Escape Too Easy 

Landlord—What’s that 
sir? 

New Arrival—It’s my airship. There 
is no suitable shelter for it about here, 
80 I’m obliged to keep it flying up 
there, see? : 

Landlord—Yes, I.see, My terms tor | 
guests with airships are cash in ad- 
vanee.—Throne and Country. 


Shilohs Cure 


Ella was seen one day before the 


him, eh?” 
up there, 


ought to be made.” 


Attacks of cholera 
come quickly, there selaom being 


must be ‘taken just as quickly if 
patient is to be spared great suffe 
and permanent injury to the 
membranes of the bowels. 
est prénaration for the purpose is 
J. D. Kellogg’s Dysentery Cordial. 


store .or, general dealer’s, and it 
afford relief before 


and dysentery 


lining | 
‘The readi- 


s em) rival in the city, soot gained an en- 
with | viable position in musical circles in 


| ‘The young lady teacher smiled and} assistant ‘ 
| Phelim’s punishment was very light.’ sents Mitte Ghd ce ee 


“I think T shall learn to like that). Her 
“You were favorably impressed by} t¢jong: 
“Yes, indeed. He watched me play- 


ing billiards for an hour yesterday 
without even suggesting how a shot 


any | 


warning of the visit, Remedial action| 5 


the 
ring | 


Dr. 
It} 


can be got at small cost at any drug | 


will 


a’ doctor can be} 
! 


mi ror on a chair scrutinizing her face} Up with a surprised expression, and | called. 

in the glass. With a deep s gh she re-| Said, “By George, sir, you're rightt’’| . See IVER ey) 

marked : i Na SE PR |.. Kisses are worth their face value in! 
Z “1 don’t see how God. could’ have Minard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff.| any ‘market. ° i 


a 


iven me such a nose when he knows, : 
4 s| Old Reporter—A well known writer| It’s too late for reflection after 


how. particular I am.’’—Harper’s| [ - you 
Weekly. who has just died used to ed he was! and the party of the other part have 
never satjsfied with anything he | faced the parson. 


wrote. 
The Cub Reporter—That’s what the 
| city editor says: about what I write. 


A light hunch may be the result: of | Coincidences 


a blonde hair in the butter. 


cidences lately.” 
“What was it?” 


it Cost $40.00 
For Doctor’s Visit 


On Alberta’s Prairies—-DR. CHASE’S| have had his large 


need of cash, who wrote that 
about the 


, American, 


setting 


Miss Million (of 


Receipt Book for “The only thing that 
I 


untertain age)— 
yorries me is 


| the movement of his chessmen on the 


| dition, hé maintained a conversation 
“T made a discovery of queer coin-| 


| without success. When the game was 
“In the poultry journal you mention | finished, Sir Walter, who was the vic-} 
it was a henpecked poet, egged on by) tor in the chess game, explained that | 


lay 


sun.’’—Baltimore| and engaging in animated conversa- 


m years nown 
‘Now don’t deny it, Phelim, for! wastnebs "Tren += 


I saw you,’ the young lady warned | ratt, tha 


| undertook to p 
| in consultation, without looking at. the 


Medicine and Receipt Book 
Very Popular Out There. 


The luxuries of city life are little 
kxown in the prairie homes of West-! 
erm Canada. When sickness comes | 
peopje find it necessary to depend’on | 
theip own resources to a great extent 
on account of the difficulty and ex- 
pense of a doctor’s visit. 

By reading the letter quoted here | 
you will form some idea of how Dr. | 

i, 2 Chase’s Medicines“ and Receipt Book 
_are appreciated in Alberta. This is 
not only due to the convenience of 
having these medicines on hand when. 
occasion requires but is also owing to 
their wonderful reliability. 

Where will you find such a'restor- 
ative treatment as Dr. Chase’s Nerve 
—~ .——leol.to-eurich the blood, stren¢gten 

the nerves and build up the run down 
system? 

Mr. Geo. Clay, Oxville,. Alberta, ; 
“writes: ‘I have always been a great 
admirer of Dr. Chase’s Medicines. and | 


C7 


| 


over twenty years. 


His medicines and | the wedding-tour. 


vill be perfectly 


book have saved me many doctor bills horrible to have people know—— i 


and have proven wonderfully _ effec- 
tive, 
come out here so it is rat}! 
to get sick. 


“T recommended Dr. Chasé’s Nerve 


Miss Rosebud 


To Men Who Live Inactive Lives.— 


Food to a friend of mine for his wife.| Exercise in the open air is the best | 


He studied the symptoms in Dr. 


tonic for the stomach and system 


| Chase’s Almanac and ‘found she need-| generally; but there are those who are) 


ed Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food to restore| compelled to follow sedentary occu-| 


her wornout nervous system. I 
him some of. this medicine unti 
could get to town when he got two 
boxes more and these cured her en- 
tirely. 

* “For myself, I used Dr: Chase’s 
Catarrh Powder with splendid results, 
For some time I was bad with catarrh 
and could not breathe through my 
neve, Now 1 ge Ad bed- end never 
wake all night, and breathe all the 


'time through the nose.” 


Dr, Chase’s Medicines are for sale 
by all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & 
Co., Toronto. 


tive organs nd sickness follows. Par- 
melee’s Vegetable Pills ‘regulate the 
stomach and liver and restore healthy 
action. It is wise to have a 
the pills always on hand. 


John Simple—‘What is the worst 
sey, Bill Sharpe?>thart p 


(viciously )—‘‘Oh, | 
It costs $40.00 for a doctor to|don’t worry, they'll think your his | 
ier expensive | mother, 


packet Of Punch is not always an easy matter. 


i 
} 


perienced during your long and excit-) 


ing career?” 
Bill Sh»rper—“‘The worst cell I ever 


got was No. 24 at Portland prison 
year, for stealing a pair of boots.’ 


HE MOST HUMAN PICTURE EVER PAINTED 


“THE DOCTOR” 


A photogravure reproduction of this great painting, 22x28 inches in size—the largest photogravure ever 
PRICE 26c. POSTAGE PREPAID. 


printed. 


| 
| 


——<—<————— 


there by popular subgeription of the British. people. 


The original of this great painting; bv Luke Fildes, hangs in the Tate Gallery, in London, placed 


Never has brush depicted more powerfully the ex- 


It, is 


| 


ast) Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, 


| 


| 
| 


pressions of professional amity, maternal grief, fathe* hopefulness or childish helplessness. 
really as well as figuratively the most human of the world’s great works of art. 

Newspaper enterprise, backing modern mechanical progress, makes it possible to 
art into the hands of the public at this nominal cost, ‘ 


THE ART STORE PRICE OF THIS PICTURE WOULD BE $2.50, 


put this work of 


PICTORIAL PRESS, 
Box 1856, 
Winnipeg. 


Enclosed find 26 cents for which please forward by first mail’ one copy of picture’entitled “The 


| Doctor." Yours truly, 


A COPY.OF THIS PICTURE IS ON VIEW AT THE PUBLICATION OFFICE OF THIS PAPER 
AND CAN BE OBTAINED FROM THE EDITOR FOR THE SAME PRICE, 25 CENTS. 


ETS EE SS a SL 


tien of Ki the F. 
nC Sot Pare 


men as an agent, Mrs. 
nks largely to the recognition 
of her talents as a pianist Prof. 
Couture, immediately after. ar- 


Montreal, acting for several years as 


rng Society and as accompanist to 
e 


; 


Montreal Amateur Operatic Club. | 
son and daughters were also use- 
ful members of both those organiza- 


Bir Walter Parratt, who. has for 
some time been an honorary fellow of 
Magdalen College, Oxford, and since 
1908 professor of music in the Univer- | 
sity, recently received the honorary | 
degree .of Musical Doctor at Cam- } 
bridge. In presenting him for the de- | 
gree the public orator made a point 
f referring to Sir Walter’s ‘abnormal | 
memory. is ‘was illustrated by an | 
incident related by the warden of St. | 
Michael’s College, Tetibury. While on | 
a visit to the college on one occasion, 
Sir Walter Parratt, who is a great 
chess player (he is president of tee 
Oxford University Chess Club, and 
has been twice captain of the eight 
chosen to play against Cambridge), 

ay two of the company, 


board. The game lasted an hour, and 
during that time the Master of the 
King’s Music sat at the piano playing 
continuously from memory excerpts 
from the great masters, and directing 


unseen board at the same time. In ad-, 


with others present in the room, who 
did all they could to distract. him 


besides playing chess and the piano, 


tion, he had been speculating on the 
chances an unfortunate flyhad of es- | 
bgt from a spider’s web in which | 
it had become entangled. 

Sir Walter Parratt, by virtue of his | 
official sition, occupies apartments | 
in the cloisters at Windsor Castle. He | 
was born at Huddersfield and educat- 
ed privately, his first musical appoint- 
ments as an organist being in country | 
parish churches. He is Past Grand | 
Organist of the Grand Lodge of Eng:- | 
land, A. F. and A. M.; president of } 
the Royal College of Organists, an: | 
past examiner in music to the Uni-' 


ave| petions and the inactivity tends to re-| versities of Oxford, Cambridge, Lon- 
he} strict the healthy action of the diges- 


don and Wales. 


The Delayed Cartoon. 
The preparation of the cartoon in 


Writing some yours ogo in aga- 
zine of Art, the late ley Sambourne 
ssid: ‘Difficulties in netic 


cartoons some times arise i the 
imposs,ility of foretelling what, not 
a aay only, but a week may bring 
forth. In December, 1871, when His 


to the profound sorrow of the entire 
nation, hovered between life and 
death. Tenniel drew two cartoons, to 
be used ds events might dictate. To 
the intense relief and joy of all, the! 
one that was issued was called ‘Sus- | 
pease,’ wita some beautiful verses en, 
titled ‘Queen, People and Princess: 
Three Hearts in One; while the other, 
a grif-stricken figure of. Britannia, 
lay almost forgotten in the engraver’s | 
bureau, but was remembered, and had | 
unhappily occasion to appear thirteen 
years after, on April 5, 1884, to note 
the sudden loss of His Royal High- 
ness the Duke of Albany.” : 


-—o — me | 
Won Election for Husband. 
Mrs. Alfred ‘Lyttelton, 
responsible for the book ° of 


| 
who was) 


“The | 


Masque of Shakespeare,’ perform- | 
ances of which have been given in 
aid of the Shakespeare Memorial | 


National Theatre Fund, is, of course, | 
well known to the playgoer as the | 
author of several plays.. Mrs. Lyttel- 
ton is a woman of remarkable talents, 
for she has distinguished -herself not 
only as a playwright, but also as a 
novelist, politician, and social work- 
er. When Mr. Lyttelton was contest- 
ing Leamington, he was through ill- 
ness prevented from taking an active 
part in the campaign, Mrs. Lyttel- | 
ton, therefore; deputized for him, | 
and, thanks to her energy as a can- | 
vasser and speaker, won the election | 
for her husband. | 


Killed 10,000 Times. | 

An ingenious statistician once com, 
uted the number of death scenes that 
aa Bernhardt had acted. Her 
deaths by self-administered poison, it 


\was calculated, a ted roughly to} 
10,000; she had these date the scenie | 


artist’s Siene over 7,000 times; had | 
sent over 5,000 bullets into her head | 
from a revolver, and so on. In this 
connection a story told of Mme. Bern- 
ahrdt may be recalled. At a reception | 
one night a lady asked her if she 
really kept a coffin at her house. “Cer- | 
tainly,” answered the actress, with a; 
; “and so would you if you were| 
the Morgue’s most constant custom- 
er!” : 


3 


A Modern Diana. 


Lady Breadalbane, who ie a sister 
of the Duke of. Montrose, is generally 
a fair contributor to the Black Mount 
bag. being equally expert with rod 
and rifle. She has been known to kill} 
six stags in succession with as many | 
shots, and ‘numerous trophies of her | 


Wy she erent ear ot 
’ re: 
stig lin B gteat master 


1 ge: 
td of Abbotsford didn't lose 
the poem either. He wouldn’t sell 
yt: for a mess of pottage, as did 
John Milton with his “Paradise Lost” 
or Goldsmith for some of his classics. 
Scott got $10,000 for the copyright 
and recéived more in after life. 

None of Scott's former works was 
ever looked for with half the anxiety 
as was the case with ‘The Lady of the 
Lake.” The cantos as they were sent 
to the 
by James Ballatityne, and po 
opinion greatly favored them. Every- 
where it was anticipated that a great 
poem would appear, and when it was 
published it excited an extraordinary 
sensation. 

The first edition of 2,060 was soon 
sold out, and then followed in quick 
succession four editions, so that in a 
few months 20,000 copies .were sold. 
All the criticisms of the poem were ih 
its favor. 

In his introduction to the 1830 edi- 
tion Scott tells how the m came to 
be written, The Highlanders, with 
their ancient manners,-habits and cus- 
toms, seemed to hin to be particularly 
adapted to poetry. He was also fa- 
miliar with the country, where he was 
in the habit of spending the autumn, 
while the custom of James 1V.—and 
more especially James V.—of walkin 
in disguise through S€otland. afforde 
him a hirit of which he made the most. 

Scott took great pains to verify the 


accuracy of the local circumstances of/ way. 


the poem, one day going into -Perth. 
shire to ascertain if King James ¢ould 
actually have ridden from Loch Ven 
nachar to Stirling Castle within the 
time supposed in the poem, and found 
that it was quite practicable. And, 
notwithstanding the great success of 
the poem, Scott never grew conceited 
over it. ; : 
“Never was he a partisan of his own 
poetry,” Ballantyne relates, reciting 
an anecdote. Being one day in Scott's 
library shortly after the poem was 


press were read to select circles | 
lar | 


His Game Eset, 
“Some say there is a sucker born 

revery minute.” 

|. “I don’t know anything about that,” © 

.responded the eminent trust magnate, 

|‘“‘Nor do I care, so létig as the birth 

rate of ultimate consumers remains as 

| satisfactory as it is.”—Pittsburg Post. 


Useful in Camp.—Explorers, survey- 
ors, prospectors and hunters will find 
Dr. omas’. Electric Oil very useful 
in camp. When the feet and legs are 
wet and cold it is well to rub them ; 
freely with the Oil and the result will ‘ 
be the prevention of pains in the mus. 
cles, and should a cut, or contusion 
or sprain be sustained, nothing could 
be better as a dressing dr lotion, 


It is better to have ‘pipe-stem 1 


than cigarette fingers —St. Paul D 
patch. 


Shilele Cure 


Wanted—Latest Ailment' 
“Well, here I am,” announced the 
fashioneble physician in his’ breez 
“And now. what do you thi 
is the matter with you?’’ ; 
“Doctor, I hardly know,” murmured 
the fashionable patient. ” “What is 
new?’’—Louisville Courier-Journal. 


Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia 


The more froth there is on courtship 
the better a girl thinks it is to drink. 


If a man doesn’t know when he is 
well off the chances are he isn’t. 


| day of Waterloo. When hia fighting | 


| near that place and all over 
| ethshire it did much damage, burning | 


ublished, he asked Miss Sophia Scott 
ow she liked it, She replied with 
perfect simplicity: 

“Oh, I have not read it! Papa says 
there’s nothing so bad for young peo- 
ple aS reading bad poetry.” 


DR. . MORSE’S 
INDIAN ROOT. PILLS 


exactly meet the need which so 
often arises in every family for a 
‘medicine to open up and regulate 
the bowels. Not only are they ef- 
fective in all cases of Cénstipation, 
but they help greatly in breaking + yt 
up a Cold or La Grippe by clean- ad 
ing out the system and: os 

the blood. In the same way 


Headaches, Hheume- 


A New Race of Pygmies. 
A remaikable discovery has been re- | 
oe by the expedition of eminent | 
ritish scientists that Was sent out | 
by the British Ornithologists’. Union | 
in October last to explore the Snow | 
Mountains of New Guinea, or Papua 
which is the largest unknown area on 
the surface of the earth. -The discov- 
ery is that of a strange new race of 
pygmies. The main features of this 
marked type of the human race, ag 


cific Railway, in midst of : 
‘agricultural and mini district. 
Lots from $100 up. Write for full 
ORTH COAST LAND GO’Y, Ltd., 
410-11-12 Winch Building, 


d stove. 

— broad nose 
the breath of whi¢h is about equal to 
the height. - es q 
Third.—The frizzy hair, which grows 
in isolated peppercorn tufts all over 
the scalp. 

These. people are in one sense 
dwarfs, but convey rather the impres- 
sion of small but otherwise well devel- 
oped men, the arms, however, being 
relatively lo: than those of Euro- 


peans. 


Wellington's Favorite Horse. | 
Copenhagen. Wellington’s famous 
chestnut charger, bore his master 
through the Peninsular. war and was | 
with him for eighteen hours on the | 


TORONTO, CANADA. 


Under the control of the Depart- 
ment of Agriculture of Ontario. 

Affiliated with the University of 
Toronto. 


{ COLLEGE OPENS SEPT. 30, 1910. 
Calendar on Application. 
E. A. A. GRANGE, Va ™ 2 


days were over -the little Danish | 
horse was sent to Strathfieldsaye. 
where he was tenderly cared for. His 
last days were not, however, entirely | 
ree from annoyance, since thousands | 
of people went to visit him. Indeed, 

these visits becume so great a nuis- | 
ance that the Iron Duke was com. | 
pelled to piace the horse in a sort of | 


cage. When at last he succumbed to 
old. age he was accorded an impres- | 
sive funeral and a tombstone wae 
erected to commemorate his virtues 
and his loyal service. 


Repelling Fire With a Drum, 

A fire of a strauge nature appeared 
in Wales in 1693. According to the 
most intelligible account concerning 1t | 
now in existence, it came up from the | 
sea near Harlech. At several places | 
erion- | 


hay, houses, barns, ete. A person | 
writing of it said: “The grass over 
which it moves kills all manner of 
cattle that feed upon it. But what is 
most remarkable ia that any great 
noise, such as the beating of a drum 
or sounding of a horn, effectually re- | 
pels it from any house.” 


A Baron Who Its a Monk. / 

An English baronet, Sir David Hun- | 
ter Blair, and the fifth in his line, is | 
a barefooted monk of the Order of 
Benedictines and for yeare has been a! 
missionary among the natives of the) 
Amazon region in South America. He 
was at one time a chamberlain of 


Pope Pius 1X. and Leo XIII. After 
the death of his wife, in 1878, he en- 
tered holy orders and on the death of 
his father in 1896 turned over the fam- 
ily estates to a younger-brother. One 
of his sisters is the wife of the Earl 
of Glasgow. 


skill adorn the walls of the lodge, One } Weicome te Islington. 
anos Bhewy rig Th eho seal enooyy Be | | Amid the cheers’ of forty thousead 
one up to sixt pointe. dining.| Pe°ple. Lord Islington, new Governor 


wallpaper shows incidents in the 
life of deer of ell kinds, and anctinr 
i ts, P 


—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—— 
A Master of the Art. 


ae ah te ot a re liars 
Floasy 7 s > Why 
even his wile belie in" 


of 


accorded a municipal rece and 
@ procession was — - jon the 
city hearty cheers raised on the 
Datidings me . : 
was 

in before a ~A : | 
half holiday wae in honor of 
the event, and the streets were geily 


| same cxpericace in the past 40 


“barge Dane Patti Open for Seasoo 


“Free Musie 


Furnished °° 


Several New Additions to the Noted Menagetfe 


A Quiet Time at The 


jreat Divide 


CROW'S NEST, B.C. 


DANGER IN DELAY 


4 
' Finer Diar ANES Are Too DANGER 
Ovu3 Por bLireMorE Pe PLE 
TO NEGLECT 
The weat danver: f kid ey troubles is 
that trey get a fir hold before the euf- 
fe er recogsizes them. Llestth is grad. 
willy undermined. Da kache, headach 
hy rvonsne-s8, lameness Soreness lumba- 
$0, winiry “tron des, » ropey ciabe er 
sand Bright” 8 a vase fll win merci es | 
fu ce@sivs. ton’t nege ect your ibneys 
Cure the kidneys with the certain anc 
erfe remedy, Booth’ Kiaffey Vi ls. 
A ° Toroxnvo., Wome WHO © Was 
 Pmoverr vo Have triear’s Dis- 
EASE ) ReGaiNeD [evr 
THROUGH LooTHa'’s Kip: 
NEY PILLS 
telon ture fas ceates NAY 
3 ange TITE FETT yr & fists 
could find litle ei f tor 
termed Biight’s di eus . L was ro Wea: 
and run d wn tuat i coull not get 
up frbm a chair without supporting 
im. selbwith both hinds. Lb would Leaver 
my b deach night with ig f cquentey 
‘of urination, wlici PCtint ant) 
realding, highl: culo ed i dat times 
contained p criiclés of bloo lL.  My wh J 
fystemn hal become wo. wenkeded ana 
ran ¢-wn that L could ecaresly walk. 1 
Wag advi-ed by a 1ieid to fry Booth’s | 
Kidvey Pilis. They s emed to go tu the 
cause of the t oubl’ and gise me quick 
rel ef. | co: tinued with Booth’: K dney. 
Jil s and was so-nril +f my suffering 
The uninary dso. ders were cor eeted, 
,andl»m now » le to enjoy won ghee 
ret withont bei g distry “ed, To wot 
always glatlvy redaom ni Bo th’s ki - 
ney Vile and wil always. .ak « youu 
word for them.’?—Mrse. M Lewis. 13 8°. 
David pl.ice, To onto Gant lors.e in 
Ji. more, ty S.J Watsen. 


Sold by dedlers. ‘l’riee 
She Kos Booth Co., 
Lrie, Ont , Sole Canadian 


“ey y Ans 


rit 


! 


50 cents, | 
Lad., Fort| 
Agents ies 

| 
{ 


Coroner’s Inquest 


A coroner's i.quest was held at! 
ae befgre Ouroner Pinkuey 


on 


narra 


forenin; A. Chatfield, Jvugene 
Miller, Ssdieg Ross, George Nichol! 
and Alia’ Moore. “dhe yerdict re- 
tu‘ned was “That Kicha d Moore 
met his death by ace dent, and) 
ttiatthe blame could not le di- 
yected towards any other person.” 
Vhe-jury. severely..criticisad. the 
fire bosees for aHowing-a man- to 


carry more than the law requires | 


—5 potnds, of explosives one 
time, and,it was jointed out that 
the victim «f thisaccident wascon-¢ 
veying ‘considerably more than 
that amount, Mr. Fterling, pro- 
vincial ning inspector, was present 
at the inquest,” 


“NOTICE 


The Mayor and ‘corporation of | 
Colman, Alberta, invite applica- 
tions from suitable candidates for 
the position. of town comt ble, 
which duty will be combined with 
that of synilary Inspecoor, clerk | 
and treasurer to the councii. 

Aplications with qualifications | 
etc, to be forwarded not later. than 
Bist, day of October to:-~ 


BaMUE. 


Suone, Chairman 


Hrary JAMEs 
Haury Clark, Committee E 


D, A. TAYLOR, M.D.C. M.. 
re SPECIALIST 6a | 

Eyg, Ear, Nose ano Turoar 
Stafford Block, Lethbridge, 
Orvice Hours--9 380-12 am.; 


1.3 7-8 p.tn, 
LEC LE 


DHQUE DARDEN SHO? 


and CIGAR STORE 


GILROY & hOSE 
1 lighC lass Work Guaranteed 


Ladies’ and cients’ 
Clothes Cleaned 

Pressed & Repaired 

Telephone 82 


Alta. 
2-5 p. 


T’rops. 


——— 


 Miapee b2 


- 


Alberta 


|satily accepted. 


‘what they) 


lerest.: pee jury a 
% was vom posed (f AR, Awarieon d 


Meals 25¢ 
Bride Cakes Made to Order 
| Blairmore, Alberta 
Phone 107 
7 : 
a NAMES 


! 1 emcees Notice 


section 8-8 29 w 4rH. 
VICINITY OF 


M, IN THE 
SUMMERVEIW. 
Sraten Tenpers will be received 
on or before the Finst Day of Nov- 
EMBER 1910 for the purchase of 
Ayy Two Qvuarrers of the’above 
named land, the propeity of the 
Hupson’s - Bay Company. The 
highest or any tender not neces- 
Address:— 


Tur.ComMIss‘ONER, 
Hunpson’s Bay Co, 
Winnipra, MANITOBA. 


» 


For The’ Best 


Meats 


Of All Kinds, Don’t Tail 
i » jze the 


“41” MARKET 
COMPANY 


A local concern catering especialy 
von. 

the Crow’s Nest’ Pass trade. 

Special 


to Patron 


to 


attention given to the 


aida Trade. 


-0—-0—-0—0—0—0--0 4-00-09) 


First-Class 


—1—0—-0— 


oro 


Modern end Comfortable 
Only Two Minutes’ From 
Railway Station | 


Corner 6th Ave. & Dearborn 8t 


Rooms Large and Wholesome 


—Table Board The Best— 


Rates,— Board & Room $30 10 $35 
Meal Tickets, $6.00 


Miss A. Smith, 


Proprietress 


Blairmore, 


—9—0-—0—0—0—0—-0—0—0— F0—0—-0— 0-000 ~ 0—9— 


Alberta 7 


i 
-0—0—-0—0—0—-0-—0—0 —0—0—-0—0 


A.J. McArthur, who defeated B. H. 
Riley 
election reeeived a majority of 200 
Vv tes. é 


in the recent Gleichen bye 


Pe eT ee 


The 


Cement 
Lodge 


MES. E. KIDD, P roprictress 


line Large Apartinents 
Nicely Furnished 
Bath Rooms and 
Sanitary Appliances 


Ouly Three Minutes’ walk 


yom New Railway Depot 
on Dearbarn St. east b« 


Monthly $28 00 


| 
| 
| 


| 
| 
| 
| 


Business toenls 15 we pei line, 
Legal notices 15 cents pér lire 
for first insertion, 10 cents per - 
line for each subsequent 
insertion. 


Display Advertising Rates on Appli- 
catioa. 


FRAVK, ALBERTA, FRI, OCT., 
cater laoenemermerresprey He Nenrn erate, Tear SEASONED 


Prosperity | 


Prosperity: 

What a hearty happy ring the 
magic word has. What a picture 
it presents of teeming fielde, and 
granaries filled to the bursting; of 
large mines where every blow of 
the pick brings forth coal or «some 
pr&ious metal; of the Jumbr 
woods and the stately monarch 
of the forest crashing to é¢arth un- 
der the woodman’s axe; of labor- 
ing locomotives: bearing to the 
marts of commerce thé products of 
field, mine and forest; of expand- 
ing towns.,and cities alive with 
human act.vity in shops, facto-y 
and office. , 

Work for everyone, and~ the 
maximum return for toil that is 
what bringeg prosperity. . Peace, 
contentment, the joy of. living; 
these are a few of its results. Al- 
berta is enjoying such prosperity as 
can be found in no other province 
in Canada. Nor is it the result of 
any abnorrual circumstance, . but 
the rational outgrowth of natura] 
conditions. Nowhere can be found 
greater ptitural -resources—such 
fertile sah Gack coal deposits, such 
gigantic forests, such a climate. 

These things are the materials 
of prosperity. All that is ne-ded 
is men and women to avail them- 
selves of these unr.pproachable ad- 
vantages. 
Tn tens and hundredsand: thous: 
‘ands they aré following the course 
of the Empire to dwell in the land 
of pleaty. There is room for all 
and thousands more, for the } 


ductivity of this marvelous land | 


has been hardly guessed. 

Here is the. promised land—pros- 
perity’s headquarters... Gird your- 
s:if, rise. and come to enjoy its 
blessings. 


Editorial Notes 
L.-0.-0. F, bl 


“ FRIENDSHIP, LOVE, and 
TRUTH.” 


| 4 Tuesday will be Blairmore's 
busy day. 


An influence is radiating 
from the Indepenilent Order of 
Odd Fellows that is extremely 
helpful. 


ee ee ¢ 


Numerically and financially 
the I, O, 0, F. is the strongest 
organization of its kind in the 
world, 


Newfoundland * 
year a failure, Tory 
‘times down there are hard 
times, “Because of the rulers 
the land mourneth.” 


| The fishery 


| this 


is 


Blairmore wants ineorpor- 
| ution and steps should be taken 
at once to erect “The Commer- 
|Centre of the Pass” into a town 
municipality, 


LL 


Are )ou doing anything for 
the progress of this town? If 
not, why not? Join the pro- 
gressive party and help in the 
advancement of the best town 
‘the Pass, 
—_—_---—— 
| The Independent. Order of 
Odd Fellows is an organization 
of world wide popularity, If 
Dts want to become popular, 
Bes their ranks and be amongst 


21, 1910 ° 


~| were spread with one of the 
display of edibles ever seen i1 The 


And they are. coming.} 


“Basket Social - ‘ 


The basket social which was given 
by the ladies of the Blairmore Roman: 
Catholic church, in the Mercantile 
hall, on Friday evening last, was 
well attended and was a splendid 
success, . 

About 11 p m. after all the baskets 
had been disposed of by W. A. John- 
son, manager Of the Calgary Sadd ery 
Co., who acted as auctioneer, tables 
hést 


Pass, 

After the eplendid and tempting 
array of delectable things had been 
freely partaken of and, the inner man 
thoroughly satisfied, dan ing was 
commeneed and kept up until the 
eastern sky told of the approach of 
day when a happy gathering dis- 
persed, wending their way to their 
own or their sweethearts’ home all 
Satisfied that they had bad a very 
enjsyable time. 

«The prize for the best. basket wus 
awarded to Miss Orelie Dourjoin 
while Andy. Miller received the prize 
for the be+t ladies’ trimmed hat. 
spite of the numerous ‘appeals for a 
mat | sawing coutest by the ladies 
gg was no reeponse and McL; aren’s 
logs are still Jying in the river.” The 


proceeds of the evening amounted to} 


$120.50. 


De sconterion to E..Morino 


The Coleman Aerie, of the Fra- 
ternal Order of Eagles, metin their 
new brick building, at Coleman 
on Saturday evening last, to do 
honor to contractor. E, Morino who 
erected their splendid structure 
aud handed over to the Eagles a 
building which would be a credit 
to any fraternal organization or to 
aby town. : 

A good programme was. provid- 
ed but the most important item 
on the programme was the pres- 
entation to brother K. Morino of 


agile, watch, chain and Jocket | 


Afver the presentution was made,| 
Mr Morino thanked the brethern 


he | for their kind thought of him and 


wish for them many prosperous 

yeurs iu cieir new u !ding. 
Gathering anscersed in the 

“wee sma’? hours of: the morning. 


Passburg Notes 

The new public school is being 
built under ‘the’ supervision of 
James Redfern, and will be a 
creditable structure when com- 
pleted, The building measures 32 
by 40 feet and has thirteen foot 
post. ; 

Several large dwellings 
stores are now in course of Gon- 


struction along Main street, and|} 


In|. 


and i 


oun, bak 1s pene 2 WITH ph de 
bel ~ LIQUORS AND CIGARS | 


Good Rooms.” Good Meats, | Rate, ahqniitg 


_—_——————————$—$_$ $$ - 
a 


wm WOGRNATIONAL CL AND GOED “007, UD 


Operates the Denison  Collieries 


AT COLEMAN, ALBERTA. 


eS 


Mines High: Grade’ Steam 
and Cokins Coal. 


Manufacturers of the Best — 
Coke 2 the Market...«0 


i 
= 


‘MAKE “MONEY EASY 


if you would do so, invest in Town. ate in 
the most substantially founded and best busi- 
ness commiunity.in the Crows Nest Pass. 


THAT PLACE IS COLEMAN: 


Write to or apply at the head office of 


THE 


INTERNATIONAL COAL & COKE CO, LTD. 


At Coleman, Alberta. 


a ae 
Crow’s Ss Nest Flour & Feed © 


Co, Ltd. 
Wha lijats and Retail. 


Agents for’ The Macleod Milling Go's Celebrated’ Pantry Queev Flous, 
Butter and Eggs a Specialty, 


Blairmore, Alberta 


/ 


| To Our Friends and Patrons: , 


our town siems awakened to the|f] © 


carpenters“‘rap-a-tap-ta p.” 


About ten cottages for the Leiteh|}} 


Collieries are nearing completion 
on the Poiiee Flats. These are to 
be followed with about. twenty 
others before winter sets in, i 


number of ts ice in that xec- |} 
Atl] 


tion Qf the mining camp. 
present a large number of the men 
have to walk to Passburg hotel, a 
distance of about a half wile. ° 


The new branch of the Union 
Bank of Canada was opened here 
last week and will soon provy to 
be one of the busiest branches in 
the province. Mr. Hughes, former- 
ly of the Frank branob, has been 
placed in charge, with Geore 
Hooper, of the Blairmoye branch 
as clerk. 

James Redfern has had his land 
on the subdivision of the south- 
east quarter section 16 surveyed 
and ready to be put on the market, 
This land is situated in the most 
convenient section of the Pass- 
burg town site,and is divided up 
intorabout eighty lots. 


MRS. CLIFFORD 
- Millinery Parlor - 

A Choice Selection of HATS on 

hand or made’ to-~ order. 

Minuce walk from depot, south of 
* Dearborn Street. 

{ BLAIRMORS, ALBERTA 


Halt! \ 


Ce 


FE. beg to announce that a | 

we have recently added 
to our plant some of the latest type 
faces designed by the foremost artists. 
q In this respect our print shop is. 
the best equipped i in The Pass and 
we aré now in a position to turn out 
job work superior to any in Thé Pass. 


| 


Let us demonstrate this t0 you in your. next seller of 
Letter heads, Bill Heads, Statements, Envelopes, Business and 
Professional Cards, Etc., Etc. 


Te BLAIRMORE ENTERPRISE 
BLAIRMORE, ALBERTA. 


i 


mi. Smyth, salbad of the hoyle 


‘tum on Monday, Mr. 8mrth, after 
jfeasting of the beauties of Blair- 
more réturned. to ‘B. ©. by the 
night train. 


We aive Haste a 1 full line Sane finden ‘be 
on hand such as elbows, pipes, dampers a f 
coal scuttles, stove boards, ete. = 


in 
(= Blairmore Hardware Co. 


3 Wilfred Wobtepholne rode his 
$ [automobile to town from Pincher 
4 Crecvck on Saturday. » The vewicle 
S| is now'in a.l. condition and ix 
fecommissioned if} his local deliv 
ery work, 


Mr. Dellas, late of the Union 
Bank of Canada, ‘at Frank, 
Yeon ttansferred 


replace Mr. 


5449S OOO eee caseeseoes : 


The “BQ” Bie Stores 
USEFUL TITINGS 


hoe every household. office .or place 
of business are contained in our fine 
assortmeot of First Quality Hard: 
ware. The want of A hammer, saw, 
“he wrench hus delayed »many. a 

juch needed improvement. The 
possession of a complete set of tools 
ue's as Qn incentive ‘to make , bene— 
ficial alterations about the house. unavoidable circumstances 
We cell evervthing in the hardware} Rev. Mr. bitch could not make| 
line, and our prices are very moder- possible to attend these services at 
ute 


has 


to Blairmore to 
Shera, who Jias re- 
signed to accept a position with 


the Blairmore Brick Yards. 


Special revival meetings are 
being held each night this week at 
Central Baptist church, 
some 


Through 


Blairmore. 


Rev. F. A. Robinson B. A. assist- 
ant ‘secretary of evangelism edm- 
mittee, preached in. the 


nen se RIED 
Wateh cur. a end window cach week, {t will pay -you, 


SPSS PHOS SESE OO FFHD OOF bO O44 FOSOH OO 7FOOOO 


The Crows Nest Pass Hardware Co.| 


Presby- 


terian church here on Sunday 
forenoon, and at Lille at night. 
Limited The rev. gentleman’s discourses 


were powerful and appealing and 
were heard by large congregations 


Frank. 


Bigirmore 


(xh RUM RENE RER REE meaerenes 
P. Burns & Co., oy 


Choice Meats 


both Seeak amd smoked 


ae +. 
ucks 
Chickens 


A well known gentleman of’ th 
we | highe r levels received a sever: 
«mack in the face froma lady neigh - 
bor last week, while in the uct. of 
asking for the loan of the Bratr- 
morE. Enterprise His doctor’; 
bill cost him $3.00. It pays to be 
a subscriber, 


Coleman Notes 


The whist drive given, by thi 
ladies last night the 
house was very largely 
and most enjoyable, 


in ‘Oper: 
attendes 
Card playing 
and dancing were kept up till wee 


morning, 


Geese 
PROVIN( LAL CREAMBRY BUTTER 
_ Give us atrial ————_— s 


= 


mae 


RRERREMRESSSEE 


W. Evans hus made application 
FS saca-aosaiaesomeeisacies Sucsbeeatebaessieesian leila for a. wholesxle liquor license, 
which wisl be considered by the 
commissioners on Navember 2ud_ 

J.D. 8 Barrett and W.J. Bart 
lett, the hustling... proprietors 
three Pass newspapers, were seen 
buggy mobiling through this town 


(SS SSS SS 


The 


ALBERTA LIVERY 


ol 


jon Sunday, probably. catehirg 
Feed and Sale Stables printers ; | 


FOR 


Mining Ticahers 
Railway Ties 
Fence Posts 


AM Rigs Guaranteed To. Be 
Travelling 


Heavy Draying. 
| mae 6 Careful Drivers. 
.. cn a Specialty 


F. W. DOUBT - Davcisier is for we 
seguiranee io 8 : : Alberta ff | puataworE, ALTA 


PHONE NUMBER 28 


TO- LET 
FURNISHED .APARTMENTS in 
central locality. Apply to 

MRS. 346. PADEN, State Street 
Bluirmore, Alberta 


ooo 


‘WATSON’S __ 


DRUGS ‘HOSPIPAL SUNDRIES A.B. HAMES’ 
Christinas Goods 


We have just received a latge consignment of 
OCbristwas goods suifa ble for pgpeots to send to 
your frieuds in the Old Country. A large sup- , 
ply of picture post cards also just in. We * 
invite you to cume iv and inspect var goods, Pm 


There’s a Reasor 
Remember 


Is the place where you 
H can get 


Fresh Fruits 
Vegetables 


and 


WA TSON'S Store General 
Groceries 


A large "Shipment of 
Preserving Prunes in 
ro-ib, Baskets, and 
Blue, Red and Green 
Ontario Grapes will 
arrive here this week 


oe SO 


-BLAIRMORE FLOUR & FEED 
Stan, 
Ww. Wolstenholme, Prop. 


- Ninth Avenue o> 


HEADQUARTERS FOR—— 


' Hay, Oats, wore Piet & ee ee Wil, FIND rie'ops 
UR FLOUR REASONABLE, QUA 
Agent for “? iT RIGHT, CLERKS .COURTE- 


———~ The Best Fiour on the Market -—-—- 


| OUS AND PROMP! SER- 
PHON 140, 


VICE I YOU DEAL AT 


Hames 


[pete was a visitor to out eanc-|. 


JAMES REDFERN 


‘lof Blairmore, 


9 | 8th. day of October, 1910, 


PASSBURG is going — 
‘to be The Metropolis 
of the Foothills, and 
Land is Increasing in 
Value faster than in 
any other part of Sun-- 
ny Alberta. 


than ever, int the Kootenay Steel Range, because the 

improvement in the operation of the door adds nearly 

five hundred @ubic inches to its capacity. Every inch 

inside can be used—and you can always depend upon # 
aa keeping your food piping hot while you wait for som 

iat dish to finish cooking. Made of heavy ‘ished 

eet steel, durable and easily cleaned, Besictes 


The Prettiest and the this 


Most Conveniently 
Located Residential 
Lots on the Townsite 
are now on the mar- 
ket and for sale by | 
the undersigned. 


important feature; there are many exclusive advantages 


AY 


for you in the 


OOTEN 


Steel Range 


and the nearest McClary agent will point them out to 
you. He will show you why your money will be best 
spent for a Kootenay. Write today to the aires 
McClary branch for Kooten: ay Beklel. 


=MoClary s= 


Lordon, Toronto, Montreal, Winniper, Vanconve, St. John, ry Hamilton, Calzary 


For sale by CROW’S NEST PASS HARDWARE CoO. 
Frark and Blairmore 


Low Prices and Easy | 
Terms! to those re- 


quiring Building Lots 


Plans, ete., may be.seen on 


applicati: n to 
| 


REDFERN'’S LAKE 
Passburg, - Alberta 
| <~7ore eee eal aa 
| Uadertaking --- ff 

T. W. Davies 


A, UNDERTAKER 
% 


a 


Fraver’s Puoxe No 29 Sincxain’s Puoxe No. 69 


EMBALMER 


He ailetone *s-uppli dand set up 
ALBERTA. 
Phone 12%, day or night 


ite: arse for bire. 


VICTOR ~ LEMIEUA y 
BARBER 


First Class Work | 
Alberts 


Union Prices 
BLAIKMORE 


DEALERS 
Rough & Dressed .Lumber, 


IN 


Sash & Doors 


- 


Hoarséness in a child snhject to cronn | 
isa cre in jcat on of ‘he : ppro ch of | 
the dsense, If Chambeilain’s Cony h | 
Remedy is viven at once or «ven after) % 
theereupy cough «pp ared. it wil pre-|§ 
vent the attack. f€ontains no poison. | 
Sold by dealers everywhere. 


the Blairmora Liang. Stable ‘e 


Bruneau & Houston, 


Bacn Phone, No. 73. 
Ilouse Phone, No. 16. 


Blairmore, ~- Alberta 


PUBLIC NOTICE 


Shingles & Lath ° 


' Blairmore 


Notice is hereby given that in 
accordance with the provisions. of 
The Irrigation: Aet, the Munici- 
pality of Blairmore has filed the} ’ 
necessary memorial and plans re+ 
quired by sections 13 and 15 of the 
said Act, with the Commissioner of 
[rrigation, at Calgary. Alta. 

The applicant Municipality 
applies for the right to divert two 
cubie feet of water per second from 
York Creek the: north-west 
quarter of Section 34, township 7, 
range 4, west 5th, Meridian, for 
other ( waterworks ) purposes and 
for the right to construct the nec~ 
essary works as shown by the me- 
morial and plans filed, to enable 
the water so diverted to be used for 
the said other pfirposes. in the towli 


on 


4 


chet eeaPT ow gue 


toany bank es Loour : 

Nhe following lands are also af- 
fected by right-of-way for the pro- 
posed works, viz:- the said north- 
west quarter of Section: 84, the 
north-east quarter of Section 84 
and the north-west quarter of See- 
tion 35, in township 7; and the 
south-east quarter of Section 3, in 
township 8, all in range 4, west of 
the Sth. Meridian. 

Dated at Blairmore, “Alta., this 


ae . 


Che irmap, 
tec. ‘Treas. « 


Thos. Frayer, 
W. A: Beebe, 


One of the ea ee gva- | 
tlemen to spe highly in Zam 
Buk’'s feveer | is Me C..E. Sanford 
of Weston, King’s Co., N.S. Mr. 
Sanford is a Justice of = Peace 
for the County, and a member of the 
Board of School Commissioners. 
He is also of the Baptist Church 
in Berwick. Indeed it would bed flioult 
to fiud a man rt widely known anil 
more high! ere is hia 
opinion of Zam. Buk. kt He says :— 

“I never used anything Sag et 

be satisfaction as. Z.m-B 

tch of ma on my Spats which had 
mth re fot over 20 years. Sometim -« 
also the disease ga eak out on my 
plied var ous oint- 


Tid, 
i bs "fs esor 

ovhing to equal 

Zam-Buk.” 

Zam-Buk = ulcers, ab-censes, blood- ayn) 

ae hog ng OF running sores, bad leg 
corm, salt poeta Ean rairie ite wets, 
Sarna, cone ice by's sores, ‘eka Purely herbal, 
500 box, druggists aud stores. Retuse imitesious, 


Soothing 

“But those extremely violent Women | 

lunatics—how do you manage to keep 
them so quiet?” 


“‘That’s an idea of the new superin- 


tendent’s.”’ 
**Yes?”’ 
“Yes. He~ 
made up in the 


had the atraitjackets | 
peekaboo style.” 


ip Cure 


When a eda man acts as a girl’s 
‘escort for the first time she tries to 
impress other girls with the idea that 
she can marry him any time she 
wants to.—Chicago News. 


A Remedy for Bilious Headache.—| 


To those subject to bilious headache, 
Parmelee’s Vegetable Pills are rec 

mended as the way to speedy relief. 
Taken according to directions they 


Mites 


_ Hon. 

fy ees 
SF, Rea andy Ute 
Stet have be been a Hvis a a & bourh 
of wealth” We Geneve hardly knetrh. 
what it was to be in need of anything 
that en ch Oneee: to existence. 
In this Ottawa ever-since its 


exiatence * he has been a constant 


“poe 


| : | 

| ; 
| 

i. : 


tesources | Suffered Tortures Until “Pwutt~a-tives" 


‘ 


Took Away The 
Pain. 


7 


“Fruit-a-tives,” the famous fruit 


struggle to get rid of the wastage of-| medicine, is: the greatest and most 


which, in other situa- 
ave been of great com- 


manufacturin 
tions, would 
m°r*tal value, 
Ottawa is, therefore, a typically dif- 
fievlt “lace in which 
to realize the value of fuel. 
us who stand here were born upon 
farms, upon where, when fuel 
required, it was only necessary to go 
out and cut it—the destruction of the | 
tree in itself was regarded as adding 
value to the land from which it was 
cut. We are, however, coming. if 


somewhat slowly, to a better realiza- | 


tion of what these things mean and, 
,among other questions, we are begin- 
ning to realize what the fuel probletm 


the supply of timber has been so far 
depleted that cheap’ wood fuel is no 
longer--avuilable. 


/ the Northern United States and Can- 
ada—as it is soon to be in its present 
course. of development—the mass of 
the porulation will be wage-earners 
living by their daily earnings and in 
a olimate which for at least four 
months of the year requires a large 
amount of fuel for fa 

and ‘abundant fuel is a-nece: of. 
| existence. There are districts in 
Canadian ¢ities to-day where. families 


snace for health and really civilized 
| life because of the cust of fuel in the 
winter, and this condition ‘will tend 
to increase rather than diminish, 

The coal supply of the continent is 
measurably well known, and the con- 
ditions of its extraction and market- 
ing are thoroughly well known. It 
| may be safely said that there will | 
| be no permanent reduction in .the 
»rice of coal—rather is it reasona)ly 
certain that there will be a gradual | 
but steady increase. We may gt | 
much heat from water power in some | 
localities favored by nature, such as | 
the neighborhood of the Ottewa 
River; but, so-far, the cost of develon- 
ment, maintenance and management | 
does not encourage us to the belicf | 
that we shall be able to make the 
White Coal a poor asan’s fuel. 

In-Canada we have coal in Nova 
| Seotia,’ Alberta, British Columbia, 
; but between Alberta and the New 
| Brunswick line little coal of economic 
| value, so far as known; but in those 
|.portions of the country where there is 
no coal, peat bogs abound. 

Now, as coal becomes dearer, the 
difticulty and uncertainty of the sup- 
ply of which we have had the very 
vivid experiences in’ the past, be- 
comes more accentuated, fhe impor: 
tance of an alternative and substitute 
fuel will become more pressing. 
therefore, the great peat bogs of 
Canada can be successfully convert- 
ed into a fuel which shall be, if. not 
so desirable as Pennsylvania coal, 
yet a practical domestic fuel, sub- 
stantially cheaper than wood or coal, 
and abundant and certain in quan- 
tity, the boon thus conferred upor 
the future inhabitants of Canada and 
the Northern United States can hard. 
ly ‘be overestimated. It will literally 


i 


j 
| 
| 
| 
| 


| 
} 


| 


will subdue irregularities of the stom- 
ach and so act upon the nerves and 
blood vessels that the pains in the; 
head will cease. There are few who} 
are not at sometime subject to bilious- | 
ness and familiar with its attendant} 
evils. 
pills at hand. 


- 
Heck—‘‘In my view the partnership 
of marriage is precisely like a partner- 
‘sbip in business.” 
Peck—‘You're away. off! In -busi-| 
ness a man sometimes ge ts a silent 
partner, in marriage never.’ 


"Minard’s Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. | 


Sally—Please, 
the broom, 

Mrs. Shipshape—Haven’t I told you 
often enough to have a place for every- 
thing and everything in its place? 

Sally—Yes, ma’am; I did that, but 
I have lost the place.—Evening Wis- 
consin. 


ma’am, I can’t find | 


Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes 
Relieved hy Murine Eye Remedy 
Try Murine for your Eye Troubles 
You will like Murine Tt Soothes 
60e at Your Druegists. 
Books Free. Murine 
Ce., Toronto, 


_Eye Remedy 


He came fibena in the sm: oll hours of 
loving spouse 
'n her eve 


the morning, and his 
confronted him with wreth 
and a telegram in her hand, 
“Here is news that bas be 
for. you since sunrer-time.”’ 
He blinked, looked wise, an1, 
ing un avainst the  hat-rack, 
throveh his pockets, murmuring, 
left my glasses in town.” 
*Yes,’’ she renlied, with 


saving: 


felt 
ba | 


with you.” 
DODDS 


KIDNEY 
PILLS 


j 


W.-N. U.; No. Bit. 


Yet none need suffer with these | 


Wr'te for Eve! 


n waiting 


brac. 


seathing 
agony, ‘‘hut you brought the contents this small beginning he built up his 


mean life and happiness to millions 
of people. : 


The ‘‘Double Duchess.” 

Owing to her successive marriages | 
to the seventh Duke of Manchester | 
and the eighth Duke of Devonshire. 
| Louise Duchess of Devonshire, who 
| is being congratulated on her recoy- 
| ery from the effects of a nasty fall, 

earned the title of the ‘double 

duchess.”’ She will take her place in 
history as the last of the grandes 
dames. She Kas a_genius for enter- 
| taining, is an excellent conversation. | 


are herded together with insufficient | 


If, | 


to get people | 
Some of | 


was | 


means to great masses of reople after | 


In the great centre of population in | 


ie? 


scientific remedy. ever discovered for 
Rheumatism, 

“Fruit-a-tives,” by its marvellous | 
action on the bowels, kidneys and | 
skin,” pravents the accumulation of 
Uric Acid, which causes Rheumatism 


| 
| 
| 


rich. 


Mts. Walter Hooper, 
Ont., says: 


of Hillview, 


arm and could not do my work. Noth- | 
ing helped me until I took “Fruit-a- 
tives’’ and this medicine cured me.” 


don’t wait until a severe attack comes 
on before trying 
Take these fruit tablets now and thus 
| prevent the attacks. 

“Fruit-a-tives” js sold by all dealers | 
at 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, or trial box, 
25¢; or may be obtained from Fruit-a- 
tives, Limited, Ottawa. 


Trying to Get a Good One 

Pat was a married man—a- very 
much married. man. He had married: 
no fewer than four time’, and all his | 
Wives were still to the fore. 
ing. to Pat’s own account before the 
t.. where he was tried .for bigamy 
ar foun Ruiity, his experiences were 
not altogether satisfactory. The 
judge, in passing sentence, expressed 
his wonder that the prisoner could be 
such a hardened vé 
sO many women. 
“Yer honor,”’. seid ‘at, apologeti- 


} 


| is 


| bittle lives. 


| Duke of Connaught, 


alist, and possessed of wonderful tact. 
At Chatsworth, where King Edward 
} loved so much to stay, she played the | 
part of hostess to perfection, and her 
political dinners in. past years at 
Devonshire House are historic. She 
makes’ it a rule to walk for a given 
time every day, and attributes her | 
usually excellent health to the prac- | 
tice. She also has a penchant for | 
| salmon-fishing, is a keen bridge-play- 
er, and an excellent judge of amateur 
+theatricals. 


Started as Farm Hand, 

Thirty-three years ago Mr. Anthony 
Brunskill, an Australian farmer, who 
recently arrived in England, emigrat- 
| ed from England to New South Wales 
and got au job on a farm at 25s. a 
week, To-day the value of his property 
in farm lands and stock is computed 
by a Commonwealth Government of- 
ficial at something well over £100,- 
000, and his income at anything up 
to £20,000 a year. Two years: after 
| landing in New South Wales, Mr. 
Brunskill had saved enough to buy 
a team of three draught horses and 
acquire forty acres of land. And from 


| immense wealth of to-day. 


Soldier and fidlacnar Too, 
Although he is best remembered as 

London’s chief of Police for thirteen 

years, Sir Edward Bradford, who re- 
| cently celebrated his seventy-fourth 
} 
} 


tion. It was not long after he came of 


birthdey. has other claims to distine. | system and it is 


cally, “a was only try!n’ to get a good 
one, an’ it’s not .aisy!” 


If. you would enjoy life, make up 


your mind to let the other fellow do| 


all the worrying. 


‘SUMMER TIME A 
TIME OF DANGER 


Summer time is a time of danger 
to all babies—but more especially to | 
those living in the towns and cities 


/ where the heat is so excessive as to 


|muke it almost impossible to keep 
baby’s food in proper condition. It| 
‘then that the little one. stiffers | 
from those stomach and bowel trou- 
bles that carry off so many precious 
During the summer the 
mother must be especially careful to | 
keep baby’s stomach wee and pure 
and his bowels moving regularly. No 
other medicine will be of such great! 
aid to mothers in summer as Baby’s 
Own Tablets. These little Tablets 
never fail to reguiate the bowels; 


&weeten the stomach and make baby | 


wel] and happy. Mrs. D. Devlin, St. 
Sylvester Kast, Que.,~says: “I think 
Babv’s Own Tablets are: the _ best 
medicine for-littlé ones for stomach | 
and bowel troubles and I would not 
be without them.” The Tablets are 
sold by medicine dealers or »t.%5 
cents a box from The Dr. Williartis’ 
Medicine Co., Brockv lle, Ont. 


Connaught, the Canadian. 

Miss E. Pauline Johnson, the well- 
known Indian poet, has been taking 
a deep interest in the proposed 
pointment of the Duke of Connaught 


as the successor at Rideau Hall of | 


Karl Grey. She writes “How many 
Canadians are aware that should the 
the only surviv- 
ing son of Queen Victoria, be appoint. | 
ed to represent King George in Can- | 
ida, they will at least have, what | 
many. wish for, a ‘native’ Canadian, 
bearing an ancient Canadian title, as 
Governor-General of the Dominion.” 

It seems that in 1869, when as Prince 
Arthur, 
~ountry for the first time, he received 
an invitation from his royal mother’s 
{ndian children, out on the Grand Riv- 
er reserve, Rrarit County, to visit the 
reserve. He did so on October | of 
that year; and in the old Mohawk 
Church, supported by Onwanonsy- 
show, head chief of the Mohawks, 


of the Six. Nations of Indians. 


Mr. Pugsley a ‘Dry Humorist. 
When Hon. Mr. Pugsley was Attor- 
ney-General of New Brunswiek he 
was once prosecuting a murder case 


; in the County of Carleton. 


It was admitted that the prisoner 


tended that her death resulted from 
unskilful treatment, and counsel for 
the prisoner had led several of the 
medical witnesses to admit that the 
rifle bullet in passing through the air 
would become heated and practically 
sterilized and would carry no poison- 
ous germs into the wound, 

The Attorney-General interposed: 
“Probably my learned friend means 
that these bullets were first treated 
with some antiseptic solution that 
rendered them absolutely harmless,” 
he suggested gravely. ; 


Prince Rupert and Land Values. 


Taxution of land values only and 
the relief of improvements is steadily 
gaining ground in Canada, particu- | 
larly in the western states, which 
have been prompt wo perceive the 
value of the principle. Prinee Rupert 
is the latest city to inaugurate the 
doing this at the 
beginning of its history. The pur- 


utiny, being mentioned 
| apateches for bravery. 
| keen sportsman and big-game hunter, 
| and it was during a tussle with a tiger | 


in 


few words. 

him how he lost his arm. 

was the laconic reply. 
Absentminded. 

Mrs. Nupo! 
ting to look more and more like you 
every day. 

Mr. Nupop (absently)—Well, 
ish him yourself. I can’t be 
with tales of his constant misdeeds 
wheo I come home tiréd and nervous, 


al 


| pen: 


age that he served through the: Indian | 
de-| elimination of the 
He is also a: who proposes to keep his lots unused 


that he lost one arm. ‘He is a man of of the real makers of the city. 
A young lady once asked ‘compelling 
“Gnawed, "| 


Dear, the baby is jor, 


bothered | 


pose is openly explained to be the 
land speculator 


| pendin the increase in value which 
comes from the energy and enterprise 
the speculytor to pay 
taxes on the true market value of | 
his land he must either utilize it him | 


i self or sell to those who will. ie 


The Foolish Meiden. 
Crawford — so your daugbter loves 
poetry? 
Crabahaw-—-Worse than that. She's 
fallen in love with one of those fel | 
lows who write it.—Judge. 


| and thereby keeps the blood pure and | 


“I suffered from seyere| 
Rheumatism, lost the use of my right , 


If you are subject to Rheumatism, | 


“Fruit-a-tives.”’ | 


Accord- | 


Ayn as to tlelude | 


» | ior officer. 


the duke was visiting this | 


Prince Arthur was consecrated chicf , 


had shot the deceased, but it was con- | 


By 


Many years ago, Mr. Gibson, _ 
having arisen, from the position of 
young day-laborer na seornill to that 
of the owner of a mill, ec a of the 
latter property’ and removed to the 

| site of the present town of Marysville, 
| on the Nashwaak River. The Nash- 
| wank is a tributary of the St. John, 
which it enters near Fredericton, 


| There was an abandoned mill on the | 


rroperty when Mr. Gibson began oper- 
ation.s He bought a large area» of 
| timber land, cleared the stream and. 
| constructed driving dams, built a new 


workmen; built a large church and 


presented it to the Methodist denomi- 


| nation: and, in short, established » 
| thriving town on the site of the old 
abandoned saw ill. He also operated 
a sawmill at Blackville, on the Mira- 
michi, assisted in building a line of 
| railway t6 Woodstock in one direc- 
tion, and to. Cratham in another, and 


mill and brick' tenement houses for | 


Tragedy in Dry Town 

“Yes, sir, 
pulled him in the river.” 

**And he was drowned?”’ 

“No, but he might .as well have 
been, fer he lost his grip on his gallon 
| jug and it' floated down stream, and 
he lives in a dry- county!’ Atlanta 


became a railway magnate 8 well as | Constitution. 


“the lumber king’ of New Brunswick. 


Mr. Gibson himself took no part in | Minard’s Liniment for sale everywhere | 


| publie life, but one of his sons was for | 


| a term a member of the Parliament of | 
| Canada. 
|- In Mr. Gibson’s later-years he met | 
with business reverses, and the im- | 
mense property went into the hands of 
a company in which he had a large in- 
| terest. Recently he retired, and the | 
property of the company, which be- 
came involved in legal difficulties, will 
be sold to satisfy the claims of credi- 
tors in Canada and Eneland. The eot- 
ton imill--has: already, been purchased | 
hy the Can-dian, Colored. Cotton .Co 
| Both sawmills and- cotton mills con- 
tinue to be operated, and Marysville 
is still a thriving town—a monument | 
to the fhresight and energy of-a man 
' who. was compelled to earn his own | ‘ 
living from his béyhood days, and who 
produced a property that is to-day 
worth some millions of dollars. , 


| 


History of the Que3n’s Own. 
The Queen’s Own, now at Aldershot. 
| dates back to April, 1860, when an or- 
der was issued uniting a rifle com- 
pany at Barrie, another at Whitby and 
four in Toronto into one. battalion. 
During the stirring days of the Trent 
affair, the outside companies were 
dronned, and the organization became 
a purely city regiment of ten compan- 
ies. Its tirst active. service was in 
1864; its second, in 1866, when it took 
part in the battle of Limerfdge in the 
Niagara Peninsula. Some of its mem- 
bers served in the composite regiment 
under Col. (now Lord) Wolseley with 
the Red River Expedition of 1870. 11 | 
| also was present, under Col. Otter, in 
| tne Western. trouble of 1885, notably 
at’ Cut Knife Creek. It has also beet. 
called upon for active service in con- 
nection with several provincial indus- 
trial disturbances. rd Roberts is 
its honorary colonel, and .Gen.-Otter 
was once its commanding officer. Many 
| of the past and present officers of the | 
| militia have graduated from its ranks 
' One of the most unique features of | 
| the regiment is the fact that every of- 
ficer, past or present, has risen from 
the ranks. Every private is therefore | 
a potential colonel, and it has often 
occurred that a private in the ranks 


; 


| 
} 


| status than his captain or other super- | 
This explains why so 
| many prominent officers of the mili- 

tia saw their first service in this uni- 
| que corps. It also explains why the | 
| regiment is able to take expensive | 
| trips abroad without assistance from | 
the Government. One trip to New | 
York, lasting three or four days, cost | 
the regiment over ten thousand dol- 

lars. The expenses of the present trip 
' to Aldershot, which will require seven 

| weeks, will be borne mginly by Sir 
Henry Pellatt himself. 


To Explore Labrador. 

The unknown regions west of Lake 
Temascamie in southwest Labrador 
will be explored by a party of Middle- | 
bury college professors which has just | 
started on its long trip. The party, | 
which is known as the McFarland ex- 
pedition, consists of Professors Ray- 
mond McFarland, Thomas C. Brown | 
and . Phelps Nash Sweet. The first 
| stage of the journey by rail via Mont- 
real to Roberval, Lake St, John, in 
northern Quebec. There two canoes 
guides and food supplies for six weeks 
will be obtained, Entering the canoes 
‘the party will proceed northward by 
the Chamouchuan River 225 miles to 
Leke Mistassini, thence northeast 
about 150 miles to Lake Temascamie. 
A full scientific equipment was taken | 
along, and the hitherto unexplored 
regions will be éxamined carefully. | 
When this work is completed the re- 
turn to Lake St. John will be attempt- 
ed by’ the Peribonka River, which is 
about 350 miles in length from its 
source to the lake. 


| 


The | Canadian Loon. 

The wildest bird in all the desolate 
marsh regions of Canada is the loon. | 
Perhaps it is on account of his shy- 
ness and the inability of man to get | 
sufficiently close to him to study him 
that he is the least understood of all | 
the diving waterfowl. The loon is 
not a pdépular bird. His long, wav- 
ering cry, that is half a wail, is any- 

; thing but conducive to the peace of 
mind of the lonely trapper, returning 


home across the darkened waters of | 


the bay. “He one crazy bird, dat 
feller,” the French trapper will tell 
ou, and the Indian say he is in 


eague with the evil spirits. 
His Audience With Him. 


ter than Lérd Ellenborough. A young 
lawyer, trembling with fear, rose to 
make his first speech, and began: ‘‘M 
| lord, my unfortunate client— My lord, 


iskin and 


Nobody was more witty or more bit- | 


What might be termed a fireless 
|water heater is a new appliance con- 
sisting of a coil ‘of ‘tubing to be in- 
serted in a pail of water containing»a 
resistance unit to take electric cur- 
rent f.om any convenient connection, 


Honeyed phrases ‘have a bitter taste 
when you are compelled to eat your 
words. 


WOMAN'S CHARMS 


| Of Skin, Hands and Hair Preserved. 


For preserving, purifying and beau- 
i titying the._skin, sealp, hair and 
|hands; for allayin, minor irritations 
of the skin and scalp and for prevent- 
ing them becoming chronic; for im- 
parting a velvety softness to the skin; 
for sanative, antiseptic cleansing and, 
in. short, for every use in promoting 
hair health and _ bodily 
purity, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura 
Ointment are unsurpassed. In the 
speedy and economical. trefitment of 
torturing, disfiguring eezmas, rashes, 
itchings and inflammations, 
succeeds when all else fails: 


A man can hardly ever fool a wo- 
man, but she can do it herself, 


Tt. is 


. Josevh, 


Levis, July 14, 1903. 


| Minar l: 8 Liniment Ca., Limited. 


Gentlemen—I was badly kicked by | 
‘my, horse last May and after using| 
| several preparations on my leg n 
thing would do. My leg was black as; 
| jet. 
Ae ag and could not walk: After-using 
three bottles of your MINARD’S 
LINIMENT TI was perfectly cured, 80} 
that I could start on the road. 

JOS. DUBES, 


Commercial Traveller. 


A certain very mean German went 
to a roilway sta‘ion booking office and | 
| said; “Cimme a , tiget for Newport.” 
| “What Newport ” asked 


| gov't gure. 
est.’ 


P| 


Vichever’s the Fug 


an. occasional dose of ' 


the fish was so big it | 


‘Cuticura 


a common mistake for a man} 
| to think himself a lady. killer. 


I wrs laid’ up in bed for a fort- 


] 


Not Shearing Lambs 


Paragrapher—Wyoming sheep shear- 
ers have organize a team and chal- 
|lenge any similar organization, in the 
world, 

Managing Editor—Of coure ‘they 
| won't dare Wall street. Idea for you, 
| sir, 


Complete in itself, Mother Graves’ 
| Worm Exterminator does not require 
the assistance of any other medicine 
to make it effective.. It does not fail 
o do its work. 

The avera, 

buy things th 
takes money. 


Shilohs Cure 


went throatand lungs. - - 


“The way to run ‘to run this cou country,” 
the village politician, ‘is to put thor- 
oughly wise, capable, alert and hon- 
est men in control of all affairs.” 

“Yes,”’ answered Miss Cayenne; 
“but what are we going to do There 
is only one of you.” 

Warts! will render the prettiest 
hands unsightly. ‘Clear the excres- 
;censes away by u ing Holloway’s Corn 
ee which acts thoroughly and pain- 
| lessly. 


e woman would rather 
1an go shopping—but that 


said 


Teacher—Who can define 
| tion 
Patsy—I kin. 
‘Teacher—What 
Patsy? 
Patsy—It’s lookin’ at somethin’ ye 
‘can’t see. 


imagina- 


is imagination. 


— 


How’s This? 


| We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- 
ward for any. case of Catarrh that can- 
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. 
‘FE. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 
We, the undersigned, have known F, 
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and 


| believe him perfectly honorable in all 


business transactions, and financially 
able to carry out any obligations made 
by his firm. 
Walding, Kinnan & Marvin. 
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. 
Hall’s. Catarrb Cure is taken intern- 
ally, acting directly upon the blood 
;}and mucous. surfaces of the system. 
| Testimonials sent free. Price, 75¢ per 
| bottle. Sold by all druggists. 
| Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- 
stipation. 


A bathtub which swings on a hori- 


the clerk, | zontal pivot to produce the effect of 
“In Wales or in Buckinghamshire?’’ | waves on an occupant 


is becoming 


popular in Germany. In many ways 


| it resembles a patent churn. 


BRAIN" WORKERS 


who get little exercise, feel better all round for 


y 


*“NA-DRU-CO” Laxatives 


They tone up the liver, move the bowels gently. but freely, cleanse the 


system and clear the brain, 


A new, pleasant and reliable laxative, prepared 


by a reliable firm, and worthy of the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark. 


25c..a box. 


If your druggist has not yet stocked th 


» send 25c. and 


we will mail them. 


NATIONAL DRUG & CHEMICAL COMPANY 
OF CANADA, LIMITED, MONTREAL. 2! 


wn 


SHOE 
POLISH 


means foot comfert. It Keeps loather soft and pliablo — makes 


Snove last longer. 


Acids, or otner Fine Bi. ‘ 
@—one rub 


net contain any Turpontine, 
lente, Brilliant 
the trick. 


ALL DEALERS, 100. 


THE F. F. DALLEY O6., LimirTE?, 


not only 


| my unfortunate client— My lord—” 

“Go on, sir; go on!” said Lord El- 
lenborough, ‘‘as far as you have pro- 
ceeded hitherto the court is entirely 

| with you.’ 


t 


jwpent yearly on hunting in Ireland 


The Hunti Bill. 
Two and shalt amitiien: ~dollats wey 


- patisfied 


Hamitten, Ont..and Buffale, N.Y, 


REPEATING SHOTGU NS. 
Winchester Repeating Shotguns are 


safe to shoot, but sure to 


shoot. They are casy to load or un- 
load,casytotake down or put together, . 
and strong and reliable in every 
way. That's why the U.S. Ordnance 
Board endorsed them as being safe, 
sure, strong and simple. Over 450,000 


Sportsmen are using them. 


Stick to @ Winchester and You Won't Get Stuck 


Winchester Guns and Winchester Ammanition—the 
-Brendare Mads Yor Bach Oioer snd Seid Breryener 


°° 


se WW 


a 4 ] ste > : ~ - - : 
early ' 4 , « 7 oe | : si lalie ! t ou Xi 
part of | S|. SWownere to mand baton) ae thot toeie dan, | ater, bere . 
ing them to conte t ; 5 N to hair ae ieee 0? m a4 i ay Mere ee : rate 
. -ewen: Ot RRP Geen TOURS that toe Bip) Boob ode po) en » pai Not ‘Seep 8 oh Be | There are anneondns (giant etinkens, row ttinlts t the aiiount that is — 
4 MATTE WH deemuch better without the | jaw ty os eho ly It Wan 1p Fra. | (Nothing to bury but dead,” ! | Crocodiles, electric evix sting rays and present in butter made une er perma, 
peril ag Ns PIPNLY Of Od PAY | Joy Hrudtleins the dauithter of & Bwisa | Nothing to stn; but songs, : | hai = ppt gs ae horied fxn | conditions: where ts the ta 
ower if they: " Ne range atid Judge, that this privitege was wecord: | Am wel aes, weet pauldihe’ denote bee + ear gr west To the average consuiner the water 
are a rated. t ed ; ere to gO . r e 0 en uo To 3 ? 
wae ere : |. “Nowhere to: come but’ back, ‘ | fowuuate é pant ae eh ager ee 
4 aac eh . , Mias Edith N. Buckingham of Ros. | : tes bok rs é HOGER 3 fortunate enough to fail into the Vara content is not ; hs rng un- 
requirements of the | 14. 4 B.A. M.. Radcliffe, ta aald to |” Nothing to see but sights, eyes requit | euay, where the perania is most jiro less there is a small quaotity of free 
ewer and ininba ate very different at | her the: OFM “wittnd ave the & Nothing fo quench but thirst, dinte wtrention, for if they are neg- "| Ute, may ve picked clean before they | water left in the package in which the 
this tine. Which mNKex @ separate box | preg ges bec phohagihe as Nothing to have but what we've gob jected there ix great danger Of eerious | can be Tesrned. butter was originally packed. How- 

’ “more Heceyry, Always try to have che. ‘oe ‘a gir rng Psion hy Thus through life we are cursed. oye irwnine of even blindness, They | The snaconda ts Ubiquitous, morex | ever, this free water bears no direct 
Plenty of ond pastdre for ‘the sheep, sis filings ate oh Nothing to strike but a galt: | should be held Open gently and wash- | by night and bas # weird cry. ‘The ma relation to the amount present in but- 
As (hit IX # Very Unportant feature, | id ras cbt curator of the Har- | wade moves that goes, ed with boric acid solution, one tea-  jors party killed one sixty-five feet. ter, but it is an indication of the plan . 
without which the animals will not do | hirshndher sttrnsthes ile ahead’ Gan mete Sale eae woes. Soon ful of the boric acid powder toa | long, and abuther party reported kill | followed in its manufacture, ; 
weil, American” thusiciuns interested in| aa —Ren Kirg. pint of water. If the doctor advises It ing dune monster that was eighty-tive | Butter mechanically perfect may con-— 

ba gio Sy Bid dino thees + gett wean! Obed | J | Third Person. Wanted. silver nitrate should be put into each | Insects are legion and render life a water. As a rule, this extreme différ- 
; University of Durham recently com) 4 gentleman met a young womag eye by means of a medicine dropper; \.torture. Mosquitoes are the lenst offen. ence‘eannot be detected except by met 
ferred the degree of weit ol doctor. formerly a servant iv his house and then they sbould quickly be washed | sive. “In places one is covered frou) who have made the subject a study. 
| er ghar baited uble, serious | gaid to ber: out with the berie acid solution. {f | bend to foot by bees. inside ones The vatue of butter is based on its 
af Wultiath Mao ; or i “Well, | thought you would have there is the slightest discharge of mat- | clothes and outside, in one’s eurs, nose, quality and general makeup and not 
uae ae yt ‘ an o red ph en been murried before now. i ter at any time the doctor's ca eyes, bair and mouth if it is, opened. | its natural composition, except in cases. 
Tiara Ta Did ig Bay See ih al ae rma | rete age wom Ay yp ren fe erly rw frog thes ore Bones rmicge tiga oe 
st cine ‘ . | two waitin’.” errily we 0 | stunces is vut of the question” There treme ' 
becoming famous for the amusement “Two! he exclaimed. “Why, you baby becoming blind through igno- is a whole Hist_of dreadful and obscure | The factors in composition that wilt 
end “nga ge vod tan ea oan | don’t intend to, marry two, do you? , mance or aegiwt on the part of the per.) diseanes. and the Krazil out tree. drop affect its quality are the extremes in 
| those circles. sme ‘ _ Who are they? _.) son who bas the care of it during the | ping its heavy fruit from 100 or 150 | guilt’ contents or whether the salt is all 
Mrs. Moore is suspected of baving “Why,” she replied naively, “thetwo first days of its life. Absotbent cotton feet, oftet’ brenks the traveler's head. dissolved. . 
| some quiet fun at the expense of .ber | that’s waitin’ is, the priest an’ me.’—St. should be used for washing out the | There is alxo a tree whieb drops a 
Le ’ ps The limit which was placed upon 
| French friends. She formerly was Louis Post-Dispatch, baby’s eyes, and it must be burned as f coloriess liquid which causes the body the water to be incorporated into but« 
| Kate Robinson of New York. A ,| Sue. ae it has been used. A separate it comes ih contact with t0 swell and ter was in part to-do away with the | 
ots at NPE, His Condition Improving. j, Diewe muet be tnken for each eye, The | gives acute pain. growing fendency on the part of some 
Fly Catches. | It was a case vf the jimjams. || Person who washes the infant's eyes | There ate rimors which cannot be to make an article that sheald contain 
! zi won | “Ig he dangerously ill, doctor?’ asked must remember to scrub ber hands | disproved, since no one ‘knows the the lowest possible amount of. batter__ 
Ex-Pitcher Bill Dineen ts umpiring the nurse. with hot water and soap before she | heart of the coutinent, of a white rice fat and set bear the name of butter. 
| better than several arbitrators who “Not now.” answered the doctor, touches anything eme. with bine eyes and. red hair. There If this hnd not been checked there 
| buve been In the business for years. straightening, out his cuffs. “I have The new baby's mouth must, also re- | are also talex of strange beasts and would have been danger of placing the 
No matter how great a pitcher may | Strapped him securely to the bed, and ceive carefui and Henneonte, attention | huge and, nucient ruins, so that South ability of the buttermaker npen the 
be. there ix always some team that be be Can move neither hand nor foot, The mouth ix often: full of mucus. America may well bold for. the ex- | question, “Can you get us the over- 
is never succexxful against. The New | You can go in now and watch him whieh must be ere quickly If the | plorer xurprixes greater than those of run?" in place of. “Can you make good 
| York team, for tuxtunce, seems to be | With perfect safety."—Chicago Trib- baby - to Drenttw well. A plece of | the African pygmy and okapL—Londov butter?" ° It seems as if that idea is 
Walter sonnnon's Jonnh: | une. absorbent cotton or clean soft linen | Mail. still encouraged tn certain localities. 
“Ginger” Beaumont, the Chicayo Na. The Limit. yc pr Pg a ie ae tv ? | ‘The overrun bears a certain relation 
a WELL REARED SHEEP. Honal's pinch bitter, is certainly the + One aay a little Wi of Deeb ‘wes eae Pits Paes rt Brg aud rere INFANTILE PARALYSIS. to the compoxiton of the batter, but ts 
(By courtesy of lowa State college.) | xenxon's Calynel, inch, ..He be won 1 uohty and was threatened nd: tito |. eatlidel “ait Vip uaivun: beeedin is - gain a not a sure indication that a high per 
| many a gume for Chance’s team when enty # pe © out Of | Cured by Music and Rhythm After | cent of water means a correspondingly - 
entering the breeding period and the | Preiss mother tu be shut up in the henhouse . it. The mouth muxt be waxbed inthis if Ld q . 
winter. The lambs,.on the other hand, | D¢ bas been sent in to break it up a, 4 ; | Hospital Treatment Failed. | bigh overrun. 

: " punishment, || Way after the murning bath and each | term ‘ 
should be pushed rapidly, as quick ma- | OF Hach tt for the Cubs. : “Very well. mother.” said the child; time before oursing } The wondertit renalix whieh can be |” A Our serie snon panties -wcth, 
turity is a matter of considerable im- | Harvard plans to engage Fred Ten- | »you can ‘whut me in dne ‘henhouse if Mittin | obtained from, the scientitic use of | rub that cherks fairly well with the 
portance if a good profit is to be made | ney as profesional bixeball coach next | you like, but one thinrg I can tell you— | Baby's Indi \ music und rhythm in infantile puraly- | Tat in bis butter, provided the loss of 
fron them: | year. The position, it i said, will be | | won't lay you any eggs."—New York baby's Indigestion. xix were the stibject of an impromptu | fat in the process of manufacture has 

Tbe ‘iambs make 8. better growth | Worth as much asx $3,000 a year to the | world. r ft | _ For babs's indigestion, which means / demonstration recently at the Tiny been kept at its minimum. It cannot 
while young, at jest cost # pound, and, | former Giant star, Besides, Tenney th | y . anc om ans trisha oe | Tim Guild. an institution in the City always be xaid that an overrun of onty 
taking all things into consideration, it | his spare moments would be provid: | Modern Business. 4 lowin “4 hn at prea 6 rhe road, London, for the treatment of par- | 10 per ceut is an indication of butter 
is more dexirable to get them off to | ed with remunerative work. | -‘Visitor-—What do you call this—fire re ; ea . os yt my sig | alyzed children who are considered in- | having a high fat content any more 

“market at the earliest possible mo- | - dri? and a w sung be bsab and ntellect | curable at the general hospitals ~ | than a high overrun indicates low fat 
ment. Tales of Cities. Clerk—No. _ Mr. Bonds, president of pty the i tines catnip tea or Sind ants eaipnangr, ghegnatgy/e mc Head Mag cup enw aM EO 
aie Mined Bacbuds, | 5 oF A our concern, just dropped dead in bis |) rion A id cot ed, mae rae whose right arm had been totally para- | The greatest factor io overrup con- 

Allow ewes the run of a xvod mixed | New York real estate has more than private office, and the boys are MOv- 10 i. i: ey trust to sicthing emt but iden | ized following an attack of ucute in- trol ts the accurate determivation of 

« _ Pasture, with access té a fittle clover | doubled in value since the formation 128 up Into their new positions 89 1.) tayen internally | fantile paralysis. A drum and bis zeal the total butter fat deilvered to the 
: They will do exceedingly well with | of the greater city, according to the ‘Wickly as possible, so that no time annie should: be given as tet week for beating it in time so as to become creamery. If more butter fat was de 
thix and a little grain: Phe flock should | asseasors’ figures. will be lost.—Puck. PERN a aap a tA <0 ” | & professional drummer when be grows livered than was actually paid for it 

. te Sigg e one can stand it elther from TP | ay have been hix saivation. What mas cannot belp but increasé the everras, 
be provided with a plentiful supply of The cit ea ndi ! of " | 

‘ i ity o ialveston Is spending : of spoon or through a bottie. The wa a electrical < ulone nd vice versa. 
geod, pure water, Woleh iM very emmen- — 1 500,000 on a protected roadway, a The Right Man. tor tate. 0) Galle. end: Aout atve | OO ee ee ? —  ereah 
tial, an 4 @imduraging outcome tw ant | ¥ P ie : Pica | could not do constant working at bis | Naturally the qnestion arises, “Can 
5 ") | Conerete arch bridge and a lift draw- , More than a tabléspoonful of two at a geumming ‘bax accomplixbed, and pow by s ips. Rhpheem 
to be the result If they are allowed to — bridge to connect it with the Texas hm ne ie sanded saiadieas eae ii eg 
a drivk wit a m—_£££--iOC Where children are subject to cotic | |! B septs arm ty anon. orem then the Suget:96 gia pes 
jawbs # small quantity of oats mixed Rented tno will: pvibe Mant ow te after warh time of enting Batt ene ene ; ter?” ‘auawer is positiv Yes.” 


[yo not fatien the ewes, but ‘put them 


with sume bran as an appetizer and 
“Allow them the run of a fresh clover 
pasture, which will keep them grow- 
‘ing nicely. - ' 
Frequent change of pasture is a. 
great’ belp with sheep. partientariy 
witb the iar , which are rather pur- 
ticular nou they eat. If they 
are turned in 
shower it will be surprising to see how 


thoroughly they will go over the graxs ~ 


aga). even though it bas been cropped 
c iy’ before, } 


atch ewes ‘and ign 


‘aA new rauge after.a.J. 


the compositions of Miss Ethel Smith 


will be Interested ‘to note that the 


ing the world’s leading shoe ané 
leather wart, While compuratively | 


| small quantities of either leatber or 


shees are manufactured in Boxton it. 
self, it is the xreat buying, selling, dix | 
‘tributing and tinuncial center of the | 
industry aod has been such for many _ 
years, 


Healthograms. 


Dry dusting moves dust; it doesn't 


remove It. 


Closed windows are open avenues tu 


one drop of a 1 per cent solution of 


find a food that is digestible make the 
experiment of putting a little bot wa- 
ter in the bottle after each feeding. 
Let the chiid take it slowly, making 
| Bure that the borde is not at too high 
an elevation, 


A Good Habit. 
it-is most important that a child be 
taught to take proper care of toilet 
articles for everyday use. 


toothbrush a special place should be 
found for it and its &pecial vare ex- 


. After being shown the uxe of the | 


Rn, ay ray hs 
SOE yng pect arene ah ary 
tpt: tad 


feet in length. 


A second case was a child of three, 
| who six months ago was totally para- 
lyzed ip both tegs. Her treatment con- 


sixted. of “marching” to an ‘inspiring 


tune played on the plano while seated. 


| of the edge of a low wooden chuir. 
“The secret of the treatment,” Miss 
| Hawthorne, the founder of the guild. 
explained, “is to build up tbe strength 


likes bext. The music keeps their in- 
terest up and prevents their becoming 


|_of the paralyzed muscles and nerves of | 
| children by encouraging them to use — 
their limbs In the way each individual | 


| tain between 10 and 16 per 


; 


with »! fair margin for safety. 1m fact. 
| purrer can be umde to vot exceed i: 
| a 15 per cent linet. A good commer~ 
' ela! product can contain 14 to 15, per 
ceut of water. This, added to the 82.5% 
| per cent standard for fat, makes & to- 
\ tal of 96.5 to 97.5 per cent, leaving a! 
‘ balauce of 2.4 to 3.5 per cent for sait,, 
casein and asb. 4 

Since the average casein and ashy 
coutent weed not exceed 1 per ceut, 
this leaves 15 to 2.5 per cent for walt. 
This amount of salt ts not suttiriest 
for all grades of butter, vor wilt it. 


any indications of tired and bore@r’ ba 


wted  ‘Tollet articles can be given as. ,. , Meet the demand of all consumers. In 


other jusect pests 
darkened nod accer 
get away from 
weather. Flies g 
sbeep than, many 
every possible 
takep to prevent 


suppose, and 
tion! should be 


To. make sheep 

watchful eye of 
Most pecessary. 
their sheep good = pastufi 
the summer, but they ove 
portance of guing among t g 
or three times a week to seé@ that all 
are op foot and doing well and have 
plenty of good water to drink, It is 
just as necessary to see thut sheep 
have a plentiful supply of water, es- 
pecially during summer, as it is to sup- 
ply plenty of* suitable and palatable 
food. - 
* The flock should also be regulariy 
supplied with salt, Balt is an element 
of food, and a flock of sbeep salted reg- 
ulariy do fur better, remain iu a more 
thrifty ‘condition and make greater 
gain than those which are supplied 
with this element at irreguiar ipter- 
vals, 


Docking the Sheep. 

Methods employed in cutting the 
talls from sheep in the division of ani- 
mal bushaudry at University farm, St, 
Paul, ure best to place the lamb ou ita 
back, pushing the skin on the tail back | 
toward the body aa far as possible so 
that enongh skin will remain to cover 
the stump of the bone when the tall is 
cut off, Ip operating on lamba several | 
youths old draw the skin back closely 
to the body and tle @ ligature tightly 
around the stub of the tall until an) 
hour or two afterward to preveut ex- 
ceasive bleeding. Place the lamb in 
a clean pen bedded with clean straw. 
Cleaulipess preveng tafection, and in 
auch an tnclosure bleeding can be de | 
tected, Rams shonid be castrated at , 
time of docking, while ip the hands of ; 
the operator, if proper physical devel- ' 
opment of the organs has beep reach- | 
+d. This condition ovcurs about ten | 
daye after birth, 


Keep the Horse's Skin Clean. 
if the skin of the horse is kept clean 
he will sweat more freely, which is 
‘pecessary tu Keep bim ip good condi- 
tien, 


cousulption. 
Long bvurs of labor @cau short 


|‘ hours of life. 


Su culled chest protectors are tar- 
gets for colds and cougbs, 
Splitting in public, places sows dis- 


|/ease and creates a burvest for the = 


“grim reaper.” 

* Overwork and fatigue stunt growth, 
invite dixense; cause individual and 
social degeneration. 

re you expand your chest the | 
ill contract colds.—Bulletio 


ise of autos saves the British | 
stul service $300,000 a year. 
About one in four of the deaths in | 
the British navy are due to drowning. | 
Hats cag be bought ih England for | 


| little more than half their cost in this | 


country. 
' As it requires 3,000,000 tons of coal | 


a year to keep Britain’s ndvy going, . 


the admiralty is investigating the. 
world’s principal ofl sources with a | 
view to a gradual turn to that fuel. 


The Cookbook. i 


A chicken loaf is sometimes garnishb- 
ed with stuffed olives aud parsiey. | 

A pinch of sait and soda added 1o 
the water in which tough meat or 
vegetubles are boiled will make them 
more tender. 

A bousewife who likes poached eggs 
says that to get them round and even 
esbe first milts the water and stirs it 
briskly uuril a “whiripeol” is formed; 
they before the whirl loses its sbape | 
‘she carefully drops the egg lato the 
very center of it. 


Aviation. 


The way io which aerial records are | 
being broken re-euferces the old say- | 
ing that there is always room at the, 
top> . Louis Times, 

The airship has developed far enough | 
fo make the question of safety appli- | 
ances More iniereating (tin ‘that of | 
syeed.— Washington Star. 

it may be poled that no fying ma- 
chine builders have gupe out of busi- 
Dens bevause of the Dumervus fatal ac- 
ecidenix in the use of aeroplanes.— 
Cleveland Leader, 


fotis In nddition tu the toys and games 
that every child expects. and should 


i 


| any one else happy today?” 


Manager (whispering)— Reporter com 
ing up here te describe your diamonds, 


The Leading _Lady—Goodness!, Do 
you think he will say they are as big 
as walnuts?” 

Mapager—Ob, yes, thut is safe. He 
is the chap who describes “hailstones 
as big as ben eggs!"— Exchange. 


ween 
Spreading Good Cheer. 
“Have you done auything to make 


“Yes, I've confessed to the woman 
next door that the set of furs which 
my busband gave me cost $10 less than 


her husband paid for ‘hers,”’—Chicago 


Record-Herald. 


They Look Alike, 
“One should never judge by outward 


| appearances,” said the moralizer, 


“That's right,”’ rejoined the demor- 
alizer. “The coat of ao honest man 
and that of a grafter may be cut from 
the same cloth.”—Chicago News. 


Short. 
“What makes you so grouchy?” 
“Financial matters,” 
“Are you short this week?” ‘ 
“Short? Say. I'm so short that wher 
my corns hurt I think I’ve got a bead- 
ache!”—Cleveland Leader. 


No Easy Matter. 
“What is meant by ‘higher mathe 
matics,’ pay” 
“It's the science by which we are 


have. A piece of silver each gift time 
soon ipcuicates a pride in’ the child's 
belongings und a care for their cou 
scientious nse. 

A shelf for shoes, ban; 


for nightgown and wrappers and a | 


Place wade attractive with fancy buxes 

or racks for ribbons, ties ‘or collars 

will all belp to make children partie- 

ular about their belongings and give 

them a. perfectly legitimate pride in 
) their neat appearance, 


Those Children. 
Do you reinember that they need to 
fomp to develop their muscles? 
They also actually ueed to make a 


a 


| Dolxe once in awhile, a great big eur | 
splitting noise, and that something is | 


the matter with them ff. they don’t 
break over aud do it occasionally. 

So don't say “Dvuo't!" every time they 

attempt it. i 

if you live tn a flat and you're 

| afraid they will bother the neighbors 

; move, but don't continually say 


| “Hush!” ‘ 
Thore children also need to walk, 


| but most grown people don’t know | 


| bow to walk with them. They waik 
too fast, and short legs take short 
steps; hence there bave to be twice 
| a8 Many of them to keep up. 
Do you ever stop to think of thas 
when you watk With a child? 
Right Position For Bed. 
A child's bed ahould be kept several 


for little 
wraps, coats and clothes, fal books | 


Railway Kissing Barred. 
The French government has decided 
to prohibit the exchunge of Kisses on 


posted as follows: “Defense de s'Em- 
brasser—It_is strictly forbidden to ex- 
change kisses upon the platforms or in 
| the waiting rooms or upon the steps 
| of the carringes of the state railways, 
| owing to the delays frequently occa- 
| sloned by the prevalence of this dila- 
tory practice, which is caleulated to 


disturb the proper running of the trnf- | 


| fie upon the system by retardivg the 


| departure of trains and which is thus | 


| frnugbt with inconvenience and even 
danger to the public, as the firat con- 
dition of safe traveling is punctuality. 
Persons. discovered kissing , will be 
liable to prosecution.” 


A correspondeut of the London 
Times has a plan fo prevent trespass 
ing by aeroplunes, He says: ~“Motor- 

|; Cars are bad enough, but they do » 
come iute one’s beuse or garden, W 

| aeroplanes total strangers may drop 
through the reof for a little chat 

|; any time. | fear the law canvot pro- 
tect one agains: such jotrusion. If 
aviation becomes popular | shall bave 


{ 

| 

} : 

| Trespassing of Aeroplanes. 
; 

} 


spikes with jong strong ptougs fixed 


on the chimneys of my house aud the 
word "Danger patnied in targe red tet. 
ters on a flat part of the\roof, If any 
flying umechines come down tn. my gar- 


dep | shall seod for the police to re. , 


move the orcupautsa, whom | shall ene 
afterward for any damage to wy trees 


order to increase the salt content there. 
must be a decrease in the water. A’ 


railway platforms. Notices bave been | 


commercial product will pass to cer-. 
talu cCousUuMers CoLtaiDing 85 per ceut 
salt, but need not exceed 8 per cent. 

It is uot safe to work too close to 
any staudurd because of variation in 
composition dne to sampling. Une 
sulnple of butter tuken.to represent a 
churbing may of may Oot be av accu- 
rate represeutation of the butter in. 
question. An average variation of at 
feast Ove-bulf per ceut must be allow- 
ed with av extreme of-at. teast | per 
ceun | ’ 


, a 


Testing Cream, ; 

The perceviage ot tat ip milk will 
have sume effect upon the percentage 
of fat in the cream delivered by the ~ 
separator. for example, when whey, 
containing 1 to 2 per cent of fat is sep- 
araied, uviess tbe cream screw is 
changed. it will deliver a cream, if it© 
may be called such, that will buve te 
pass through the separator aguin be- 
fore it can be churned, but just how 
much twe creams will vary In tes, one 

} made from 5 per cent milk and the 
| other from 4 per cent milk withuut 
| changing the cream screw. we are un- 
| able to say, and we can find no data 
| that will belp us to answer this ques — 


| matter to determine just bow. much 
| the two creams would vary in text 
| running some 4 and 5 per cent 


' through a separator under the 


4 Dulidiugs Harpers Weekly, 7 


able to figure out a woman's age."~— inches from the wail, and if it is a | or shrubs!” ‘ / Rations Colts. : 
Chicago News. | brass or tron a heavy shawi | Ap ‘cdaheaend Coaaeeetaad aed? 
or bianket should be thrown over the The Radic-activity of Snow, | equal ports of coro and oats ground te- 
é His Rise and Fail. beadinard Young mothers have some | There hax recently beeu publivbed Ip gener te be ope of the best grain ra- 
My husband was a very bigh StPUBg times wondered why their little opes | Paris a resume of the results obtalmed tions for growing colts. It furnixbes 
Saree, ie fier ulus to ued pertectiz well wake “by French wieutiats frum their study | elements areded for the Producten wf 
| ae es: me beard he was hung °8 up sneezing wud coughing. Opon mov- | of the madivactivity of the snow that fat, bune and musele, Adding bran er: 
e's peak.” —Leslie's Weekly. ing the bead of the bed several inches fell at Boulogne during last winter. It | Hus@ed meal to the ration aids very 
Poke —~ _ from the wall and covering the opea- | bax tee known xinee 1M that newly much in keeping the bowels reguiar 
sila panel Posen Detter, | work headbowtd these pesky colds will fallen snow ts radioactive, but the | apd ido fx pe vagy to (Bus 
‘Aad goodly to the sight!" ‘ probably cease. Subject bas net before beer so fully Way lessens the . 
Se John G, Baxe wrote years ego, p's ye. examined The luvestigutors announce —— - 
And John G. Saxe was right. | Baby's Firet Shoes. that xuew «quickly gathered oe 
Quite beautiful are little girts | Many young mutbers treasure the} dewent ti the earth bs 
nd pleasing- to’ the mn first tiny whwe of soft . kid wero bY | active. Kadie-netivity disappears oe 
Few veep one ond clustering curt their baby wu or daughter alsive all une entively afier the lapse of two 
an's 708 other infantile belongings, Ib keeping | wurs, nowever. Snow whieh bas | 
Yes, beautiful are little girts, : with this sentiment Rae come abuwt eRe | fyiten ow the sell appears to retain tts 
a the dullest eR | Practice of siivering one of these Hittle | aydinctivity a tittle jonger than that 
They're prettier when they're big, | “HUr™ 'P Order to Make Kis Prevervetlo® | vii ts tay come to. nest upon the routs 
_-Homerville Jourseh | Dermauvul favorable to thelr 


RETO LVED oe 4 
THAT WHEREAS TA GNING | 
“HS HERE AGAIN WE SHOULD BE 
THANKFUL THAT THERE ISA } 
STORE ti¥ OUR TOWN WHERE WE § 
CAN BUY, WITH SO LITTLE TROUBLE | 
AND EXPENSE ALLTHATWE WISH | 
To WEAR. OOR FOREFATHERS 
COULD NT. DO THAT 
BUSTER. BROWN. 


BUY. WITH LITTLE TROUBLE. 1S THERE NOT LOTS 
IN THAT ? ‘THE MAIN TROUBLE YOU HAVE, IS IT 
NOT, 15 IN KNQWING YOU ARE GOING.TO GET THE 
GOODS YOU BUY AT A REASONABLE PRICE ? 


WE ARE AT YOUR SERVICE AND INVITE You 
TO COME TOOUR STORE. ° 


MAR ON 


| -- Departmental Stores 
BLAIRMORE ALBERTA 


en ES eee en eens: Vee. Seeane 


"sol Sry eee rere RR te a lactis ‘= 


| Blairmore LIquor Store 


"> PAB: LIQUOR, STORE OF QUALITY 


—BETEFER —-—~ 
HAVE 
A 
BUTTLE 


‘YOUR 
FRIENDS 
| ARRIVE 


in readiness as an 
evidence that. 
you knew what @ 
will ** tench the 
+pot.’? You'll en- 

jov a drink your- 
self. too, Scotch 

hke ours is a treat 

for anybody. 


.Phone Your Crders To No, 45 soil You Can De= 
pend on Prompt Delivery. 


MM. Rosse 


‘they'll enjoy a 
nice cold high- 
ball made with 
our genuine 
SCOTCH 
WHISKEY 


tebahiacicalel 


Pag tag eng ns aS te eS > Fe Re Re 


§ WEST CANADIAN 
COLLIERIES LIMITED § 


‘ 
‘ 
: apsece 
/ Belgian Coke Ovens, of the 
, Bernard Type, in use at Lille. , 
, EP 
; Miners of 4 
¢ 
; STEAM, 5 

COKING y 

| AND / 
DOMESTIC COAL 
; n2ddeeEe / 
; a wae AT BLAIRMORE, LILLE AND-BELLEVER ey 
f LEAD OPPICE AT f 
, BLAIRMORE - mee © ee 
. , 


+ o_o eo ¢ 


rer 


TUESDAY WILL 
BE BUSY DAY 


When Hidependanit Order 
of Odd Fellows Will be In= 
stituted at Blairniore. 


SIN MERCANTILE HALL 


Preside=-Will Have 
Big Banquet 


On. Tuesday evening, October 25, 
in the Mercantile hall, a lodge of 


the Independent Order of Odd 
Fellows wi'l be ~ organized. Dis- 
trict grand master Shera will be 


present and other important dik- 
hitaries of the Order. 
Pincher,Creek and Cowley 
will be present to put on the dif- 
lodge. 
are being made to give the visiting 
Odd the their 
lives in Blauirmore basis of 
their motto “Friendship, Love and 


Coleman, 
lodges 


ferent degrees of the Plans 


Fellows tinte . of 


en the 


Truth.” e 

Odd Fellowship began early in 
the last century in England, and 
was transplanted in America some 
81 years ago. It-hasbeen a plant 
of vigorous growth, and now over 


one million men are among its 
votarics. 

Odd) Fellowship has lived. be- 
cause it has made good and.shown 
that it has a right to live, 
adapted to the wants of mankind, 

Some of the great duties of the 
order are; Ist, to visit the’ sick : 


2nd! to relieve the distressed ; 3rd, 


for itis 


to bury the dead; 4th; to educate 
the orphans; 5th, to aid __the 


widows. Over three million dollars 
(#3,000,000) was spent last year 
for Alberta 
their are 48 Jodges and 3,400 mem- 
bers, 8 Rebekah lodges and nearly 
1,000 members. ‘This is tae 50th 
year of the Rebekah, order, 

The following, which is relative 


these. purposes. In 


to principles of the order, is worth 
reading: : : 

By friendship we mean_ the 
greatest lovey, the greatest useful- 
ness,the most open communication, 
the noblest sufferings, the 
truth, the heartiest counsel, and 
the greatest union of 
which brave men and 


severest 


minds of 
women 
capable.- Jeremy Taylor. 
Love—is Bhe greatest thing that 
God can give us, for Himself is 
love; and it is the greatest thing 
| we can give to God, for it will also 
give ourselves and carry with it all 
that is ours' The apostle calls it 
the bond. of perfection; it is the 
old, the new and the great. com- 


are 


mandment, and all the command- 
ments, for it is the fulfilling of the 
other graces without instru- 
ment but its own immediate vir- 
tue.—Jeremy ‘lay lor. 

Truth—is the handmaid of 
justice; freedom is its child; 


any 


peace 
its companion safely walks in its 
in its steps; victory follows in its 
| train, It is the 
| nation from the 


brightest ema- 
gospel—it is the 
j} attribute of God.—Sydney Smith. 

The Enterprise welcames hearti- 
ly the Independent order of Odd 
Fellows their distinguished 
visitors and fellow-lodge men to 
our town, and may they’ long per- 
petuate their principles among us. 


and 


Rev. W. G, Fortune, secretary’ of 
Temperance and Moral Reform 
League of Alberta, will. preach in 
the Baptist church, Blairmore, on 
Sunday evening next, 


wt 


dens 


NOTICE— From this date my 
store will be open every working 
day from 8o0’c. a.m, to 6.80 p.m.,, 
except Saturday’s and pay-day’s|*® 
when the store will*be open to. 10 
p.m.— H. ¥, WEBER, 


ae 


W.-G. Shera, G. M., Will 


J-Langlois, and children arrived in 


‘l attended. 


[Happenings in and|150 BUILDINGS | 
Around Blair- | IN 13 MONTHS 


more ; Is Bisiembte’s C Grand Recs 
‘ord=-[lasons and Car- 
nters at Busy : 


was > =a 


BLAIRMORE} is BOOMING 


‘Dr. Coulthard left by Monday's 
flyer for the coast. * ~ pen 


* 


G. Gwynne, of Moyie, B. C.. 
in Blairmore on Monday. 


surne 
building is, progressing rapidly. 


F. M..and Mrs. Pinkney, of Lille 
were in, town. Sunday afternoon. 


bhe work on the new P. 


Good Gienings at Blair- 
more for More 
Industries 


Work on the waterworks-is. pro- 
gressing favorably. 


APB 
basiness trip to the coast: 


ma. 


” 


Now that the * 
of the 


; rap-a-tap-tap 
Hames returned from a i I I 
and®* the 


busy carpenters 


gtideg ie h “click ” of the magon’s trowel are 
Services will be conducted in the 
Presbyterian ehureh Sunday morning 


neXt ut 11 O'clock. 


being heard at morning, mid-day 
and night, aye can notice a face of 
grave disappointment figure with 
those who have been so relentless 
in their efforts'to prevent our pros- 
perity being yoiced to the 


‘ , world, 
vaudeville ]- 


Dr. O'Hagan, of Lethbridge, but 
formérly a Blairmore citizen, was 
in town on Sunday. 


outside 


Brown’s Vaudeville Co. put on & 


picture and 
the Mercantile 


Tuesday night. 


sme 72 . : 
Oy OS Without any fear of  contradie- 


must admit that Blair- 
foremost and 
happier future in store 
attended the whist drive at Cole-|than has anyother town of South- 
man last night, whic he was an un-/ern Alberta 

quaftfied success. 


show in hall on 


tion, we 
more today stands 
Quite a number-of Blairmorians| has a 


Within the past thirteen months 
upwards of one hundred and_ fifty 


On Monday two mountain goats af at 
7 ; buildings have’ been erected, -and 


were seen by Citizens’ roaming ; P 
é J 4 “| steadily but surely the demand for 
about the mountain top north of ; 
' houses and-fer-daborers has beep 
Own. ° : + ahs 
increasing, andit is expected - that 


Mrs. Langtois, wife of Rev. Arthur 


1911. Blairmore’s 
population will have doubled. or 


by the close of 


town yesterday —_ forenoot ‘om 
AMET Sea lay enoon from urhaps trebled, that of twelve 
Edmonton. 
, months ago. 
Nis eleta ’ 5 Hn ‘ ry yea F sa es ‘ 
Clark’s .Moving — Picture , and The elass of buildings which are 


Vaudeville Co. will appear at the 
Mercantile Hallaga'n to night with 
a remarkable fine line of Co 
filma, 2. 


pal streets are’of fine finish 
voy ~ . we ; 
¥ *" |convenient and commodious in 
n location and style. ~~ = 
Rev. Arthur: Langlois Has rented 
the new dwelling house: just com=| town apd who have - travelled” ex 
pleted for W. May. on, State street tensively through other parts of 
east, and will move into it ina few] Western Canada are unanimous in 
days. voicing their pride in Blairmore’s 
J, A. MeDonald eame in from the} beautiful situation and the mag- 
South Fork Monday, and reparts|nificence of the surrounding hills, 
work progressing well in that vicin- We have al] that furnishes the 
itv, though as’ yet there is nothing strongest hope for the future. Our 
more than talk abort the new baanch surrounding country’ 18 enwrap- 
railways. ping an abundant wealth of coal 
Rev. Mr, Langlois conducted a} and mineral beneath its sod, 
Frenéh service at Coleman on Wed-| the timber ‘tat cove 
nesday for the benefit of the French 
people and in conjunction with the 
course of evangelistic servic&® being 


while 
rs the surface 
of the vales is sufficient to supply 
the building demand for many 


¥ 


going up and adorning our prinei-| % 
and | %& 


People who have visited this| © 


Broker in Mines 
and | 
Mining Stocks 
Oe ED 


Houses for’sale-or rent 
and rents collected. 


‘Tsenor of Marriage Licenses 
» avd Notaty Public 


VICTORIA STREET 


Bias. Alta. 


ooe%o 


pitcsereesensasaeseneseeeinest anette eee eee eee eeeee 


|e 
: 


‘Fi ite 
tains | adit 
| IRON BEDS 


BUREAUS 
WASHSTANDS 


PRICES AWAY DOWN 


J. Montalbetti 
MAIN STREET 


i SPREE Pe are a 


Robert Gordon Monn) 
B. A. 


o BARRISTER, § SOLICITOR 


| 


LOPE 
LNZALALALAL A. 


seen pboe nena HN NN SOL NEO 


Sew 


Alberta 


7% 


years to come, 

' There is also ample raw material 
right here for the _ of 
‘manufacturing concer, such as 
sash and door factories, rolling 
niills, and.sueh, and there is an 
excellent -opening for a steam 
Jaundry which could command the 
|‘ washee ” trade of all the neigh- 
| boring towns of the Pass and give 


a more prompt and reliable service 
Eboata the public. 


held in that town this week. 


Preparations are being made for a 
grand banquet to be held on the|— 
night of the inception of the L.0.0.F. 
in Blairmore—October 25th, It is 
expected that, including visiting 
friends from other towns, over eighty 
quests will partake in the opening 
functions, 

Jobu Robertson McPherson, F.S, 1. 
London, is in charge of the engineer* 
ing work in connection with the 
laying of the water works -at Blair- 
moreand has opened up an office 
here under Messrs. Woods and Steele 
Dowiuion laud surveyors, of Pincher 
Creek. 


FOR 


Camp 
Too 


Some folks went to Coleman on 
Sunday afternoon to attend the 
whist party, hut were disappointed 
to find that they ‘had been mis- 
informeu through the Miner as to 
the date. The date should Have 
read: 19th instead of 16th. How- 
ever a big party went west last 
night and vote. the event ane of 
the most enjoyable they ‘had’ ever 


The old buildings which were 
occupied: by Kalil Bros: and the 
Italian shoemaker have been torn 
down to give place to the more 
‘presentable structure to ‘be built 
by Mr. McKEchren, The ground 
floor of the new building will, it is 
said, be occupied by Kalil Bros., 
who propose going extensively into} 
the dry goods trade, 


ames | 


e’s Shirts 
and Collars 
\ -Berestord Shoes 


WEBER’S 
STORE 


Next to Cosmopolitan Hotel 


r 
r 
I 
) 


eT 


MEN 


’s Clothing 


of CPSP SPSS FSFFSSFFFESS FOOD OO FSEPOSOD 


PRILTRILI PPS PRIAE NPRI NI NPRIS